1151 to 1200 (of 2710)
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) (Ottawa, 1965). Monique Laurent, “Le catalogue de la bibliothèque du séminaire de Québec, 1782” (thèse de des, université Laval, Québec, 1973). “L’abbé Germain Dudevant
 
 1835; 5 July 1836. Gates, Land policies of U.C. C. [G.] Karr, The Canada Land Company: the early years; an experiment in colonization, 1823–1843 (Ottawa
, 149: no.6885. Queen’s Own Rifles Regimental Museum (Toronto), William Smith Durie papers. Can., Dept. of Militia and Defence, Report on the state of the militia (Ottawa), 1868–80. Globe
 
(Ottawa), XIII (1935–36), 433–55. Saint John Globe (Saint John, N.B.), 17 Nov. 1923. E. M. Saunders, “The life and times of the Rev. John Wiswall, M.A., a loyalist
. Returned to Ottawa in 1884, Edgar resumed his activities in the party’s back rooms. Once again he was appointed one of the parliamentary whips, this time by the new Liberal leader, Edward Blake. Edgar took
 
). D. B. Miquelon, “The Baby family in the trade of Canada, 1750–1820” (unpublished ma thesis, Carleton University, Ottawa, [1966]). A. S. Morton, “Forrest Oakes
Shamrocks played in the Amateur Hockey Association of Canada, having succeeded the Montreal Crystals in 1895. Canada’s leading hockey league at the time, the AHAC also included the Ottawa Silver Seven, the
 
Crémazie, Œuvres, Odette Condemine, édit. (2v., Ottawa, 1972); Œuvres complètes de Octave Crémazie publiées sous le patronage de l’Institut canadien de Québec, H.-R. Casgrain et H.-J
Fergusson and Jemima Johnston; d. unmarried on 30 Dec. 1867 at Ottawa, Ontario. Adam Johnston Fergusson was educated in Edinburgh and
Wade, his second wife; m. first 8 Dec. 1897 Christine Mackay Keefer (d. 1903) in Ottawa, and they had a daughter and a son; m. secondly 14 Oct. 1908 Caroline Toovey (1878–1958
 
?” (JR (Thwaites), XLI, 87–89.) The Flemish Bastard again appears, 30 Aug. 1656, when he led an attack on a group of Ottawas and Hurons
/166. C. E. Connolly, “The action of the Canadian Cavalry Brigade at More[ui]l Wood and Rifle Wood, 1918,” Canadian Defence Quarterly (Ottawa), 3 (1925–26): 8–18. Framlingham College
, went to Ottawa to become postmaster general. Since his appointment had been made quickly, Taillon wrote to Lieutenant Governor Chapleau on 4 May that “it is hardly appropriate for me to offer you my
 
report (Halifax), 1863–93. V. J. Strong-Boag, The parliament of women: the National Council of Women of Canada, 1893–1929 (Ottawa, 1976). The Woman’s
 
Works by Michel Forton are to be found in Quebec City at the Musée du Québec, the Séminaire de Québec, and the Hôtel-Dieu, in Montreal at the Hôpital Général, and in Ottawa at the Henry Birks Collection
 
 juin 1932. N. R. Ball, “Vision, cœur et raison”: l’ingénierie au Canada de 1887 à 1987 (Ottawa, 1987). BCF, 1920. J.‑P. Charland, L’enseignement spécialisé au Québec, 1867 à
 
, RG 31, C1, 1901, Mouth Whitefish River, Nipissing Dist., Ont.: 2 (mfm. at AO). Sudbury Star, 13 May 1916. Canadian Mining & Mechanical Rev. (Ottawa), 11 (1892): 42–43
 
. Cheadle, Cheadle’s journal of trip across Canada, 1862–1863, ed. A. G. Doughty and Gustave Lanctot (Ottawa, 1931; repr. Edmonton, 1971). Daily British Colonist and Victoria
 
selections in W. A. Deacon, The four Jameses (Ottawa, 1927; rev. ed., Toronto, 1953; repr., intro. Doug Fetherling, 1974), and the volume published as Canada’s poet
 
: a century of witness ([Halifax, 1971]). V. J. Strong-Boag, The parliament of women: the National Council of Women of Canada, 1893–1929 (Ottawa, 1976). The
in the Canadas, 1828–1858: evolving a corporate memory for the Indian Department” (typescript, Indian Affairs and Northern Development Canada, Treaties and Hist. Research Centre, Ottawa, 1985). R
there in 1763. That spring the able Ottawa chief Pontiac* raised the Upper Lakes tribes against the British and by June they had captured most of the
 
, The Poles in Canada (Canada Ethnica, VII, Ottawa and Montreal, 1968), 17. The Polish past in Canada; contributions to the history of the Poles in Canada and of the Polish-Canadian
 
. de Seignelay. On the occasion of the governor’s conference with the Ottawas at Montreal, in September 1682, Vieuxpont served as his interpreter. The purpose of the meeting was to establish peace
 
(Ottawa), 1900, app.G. A. J. Douglas, “Dr. J. W. Good,” Univ. of Manitoba Medical Journal (Winnipeg), 1 (1929-30): 150-51. C. C. Ferguson, One hundred years of surgery, 1883-1983: professors of
, the oldest Protestant church in Ottawa, in 1867. The congregation included the engineer Sandford Fleming* and wealthy lumbermen such as
resistance to Canadian aggression and were deeply resentful of the proscription of Louis Riel and the others who had forced Canada to bargain for possession of Rupert’s Land. The government at Ottawa was
 
Several chairs made by John Griffith are in the Canadian Museum of Civilization (Ottawa) and there are others, including a few with their identifying label, in private collections
Guibord (Ottawa, 1914). La Presse (Montréal), 1er avril 1967. Théophile Hudon, L’Institut canadien de Montréal et l’affaire Guibord; une page d’histoire (Montréal
, and from the admission of the province into the Dominion by Charles R. Tuttle (Ottawa, 1880). Begg, Hist. of North-West, I, 393ff., 450; II, 35. Morton, Manitoba
 
hist. nationaux, Travail inédit numéro 125 (Ottawa, 1972), 41–42. V. Ross and Trigge, Hist. of Canadian Bank of Commerce, III: 66, 88, 152, 351.
Office through him. In 1877 Haly’s independence of Ottawa, combined with negligence in the offices of the governor general and the prime minister
grandson of Harris, Grant Carr-Harris of Ottawa; in 1961 Carr-Harris produced The secrets of Alexander Harris, a book based on a series of articles contributed by his grandfather, under the title
). Handbook of the Presbyterian Church of Canada, 1883, ed. A. F. Kemp et al. (Ottawa, 1883). Hugh McKellar, Presbyterian pioneer missionaries in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and
 
the Atlantic Canada Newspaper Survey database, available online through the Canadian Heritage Information Network administered by Communications Canada (Ottawa
., ([Saint John]), V, no.1 (September 1960), [10–12]. Judith St John, “A peep at the Esquimaux through early children’s books,” Beaver, outfit 296 (winter 1965), 38–44. Ottawa Citizen
traditionnelle au Canada français (Ottawa, 1960), 63–66.
 
, Michael J. Heney ran away from his Ottawa valley home when he was 14 to work on the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway. An elder brother soon found him and returned him to the farm
). Turner, NWMP. “Commissioner L. W. Herchmer, 1886–1900,” RCMP Quarterly ([Ottawa]), 2 (1935), no.4: 4–8. D. B. Smith, “The Herchmers’ secret,” Beaver, outfit 310 (spring
 
. H. Christie, Armstrong, B.C., and Department of Indian Affairs, Ottawa, in past twelve months (n.p., [1917]; copy in BCARS, Northwest Coll., NWp 970.5, C554c
Holmans opened each season in London before setting out on tour. Other engagements included the opening of Gowan’s Opera House in Ottawa in February 1875 and the Canadian première of Gilbert and
([Ottawa], 1980). Clive Powell-Williams, Cold burial: a true story of endurance and disaster (New York, 2002). Malcolm Waldron, Snow man: John Hornby in the Barren Lands (Boston, 1931; repr
 
domiciliated Indians living near Montreal and of the Ottawas and Potawatomis from the pays d’en haut. Governor Vaudreuil
, and then published in part in La Lyre d’or (Ottawa), 2 (1889), nos.4–6. The novel was published as a separate volume in Montreal in 1913
 
A. Macdonald in Ottawa and Joseph-Adolphe Chapleau (1879–82
. Leonora Howard King (Ottawa, 1999).
 
Canadian government. When the terms of union agreed upon in Ottawa were submitted to the electorate of the Island in April, Haythorne’s government was defeated, but it was clear to most anti-confederates in
., Winnipeg and Ottawa, 1982). Frances Swyripa, Wedded to the cause: Ukrainian-Canadian women and ethnic identity, 1891–1991 (Toronto, 1993).
 
The Canadian Music Library Association (Canadian Library Association, Ottawa) is compiling a list of J. D. Humphreys’ publications
 
. The immediate effects of the mission on communities could be dramatic. In Ontario, theatres closed down in Ottawa for lack of patrons; the railway shops in Stratford cancelled overtime work; and the
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