1651 to 1700 (of 2710)
1...32  33  34  35  36  ...55
. Kenneth J. Tyler Can., Dept. of Indian Affairs and Northern Development, Central Registry files (Ottawa), Treaty annuity
 
National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa, contains the largest number of works by Lafrance, as well as tools belonging to him. The Musée du Québec and several parishes in the Quebec City region also have
 
. Parks and Sites Branch, Manuscript report, no.171, Ottawa, 1977). A. E. S. Martin, The Hudson’s Bay Company’s land tenures and the occupation of Assiniboia by
 
continued to serve the Indian Department efficiently. In 1824 he was involved in a survey of Algonkin and Mississauga Ojibwa claims in the Ottawa valley. On
stockmen. On several occasions he went to Ottawa to represent the cattlemen’s interest. One of the first members of the Western Stock Growers’ Association, he was a vice-president from 1903 to 1911 and
1882, and in Bellechasse for the Legislative Assembly in 1886. It was not until 1887 that he went to Ottawa as the Liberal mp for Montmorency. He resigned, however, on 10
 
The main surviving examples of James Langford’s work as a silversmith are in the Henry Birks Coll. of Silver at the National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa) and, to a lesser extent, at the N.S. Museum
-1980, Maurice Perreault, compil. (Ottawa, 1983). Yolande Pinard, “Le féminisme à Montréal au commencement du XXe siècle (1893-1920)” (mémoire de ma, univ
 
possibilities. In the autumn of 1700 he and Jean Enjalran were sent to the Ottawas to persuade them to come down to
 
 March, the party journeyed by the Ottawa route and through a chain of lakes and streams and difficult portages to James Bay, arriving on 18 June. The party captured the four Hudson’s Bay Company
provincial president of the WCTU in 1896–97 and at the time of her death was vice-president of the dominion WCTU as well as honorary vice-president of the Ottawa Equal Suffrage Society and honorary president
), Canadian Expeditionary Force, in the Great War, 1914–1919 ([Ottawa], 1947). Nicholson, CEF. P.-G. Roy, Les rues de Quebec (Lévis, Qué., 1932). Thirty Canadian V.C.s
 
): 164. The Talbot papers, ed. J. H. Coyne (2v., Ottawa, 1908–9). Christian Guardian, 15 Feb. 1832, 30 Oct. 1833. Chronicle & Gazette, 2
provinces was difficult. There were steamships on the Great Lakes and the Rideau Canal had been built between Bytown (Ottawa) and Kingston; but in the early years of the survey travel from Montreal to Canada
two days later with his Ojibwa and Ottawa allies, following the south shore of Lake Erie and engaging in skirmishes with bands of Cayugas. Returning to his fort on 24 August, he learned that the
(1924): 273–90. Jeanne d’Arc Séguin, named Saint-Jean-de-Sienne, “Le sentiment de la nature chez Lozeau” (thèse de phd, univ. d’Ottawa, 1963).
 
, 1967). H. W. Jannasch, “Reunion with Mikak,” Canadian Geographical Journal (Ottawa), LVII (1958), 84–85.
trade in his native Ottawa valley until an opportunity arose to enter the federal service in 1879. In that year the government of Sir John A
Conference Arch., Halifax). UCC, Montreal-Ottawa Conference Arch. (Montreal), 7/StJ/1/1; Montreal Presbytery, St James Street Methodist Chapel (Montreal), reg. Wesleyan (Toronto), 2 (1841–42)–3
. Stanley (5v., Edmonton, 1985), 3, 5. Weekly Herald (Calgary), 30 Sept. 1897. Walter Hildebrandt, The battle of Batoche: British small warfare and the entrenched Métis (Ottawa
 
(Ottawa, 1970), 13–16. Elizabeth Collard, “The St. Johns Stone Chinaware Company,” Antiques (New York), 110 (July–December 1976): 800–5.
 
introducing opening prayers to the House of Commons and spoke often to his biographer of “the foul and fetid atmosphere” of Ottawa politics. Macdonald gained
; exploration, 1864 (Victoria, [1865]). “An interesting visitor,” Ottawa Daily Citizen, 1 Sept. 1888; repr. in Daily News-Advertiser (Vancouver), 15 Sept. 1888
 
men and women of the time (Morgan; 1898 and 1912). Canadian R.C. bishops, 1658–1979, comp. André Chapeau et al. (Ottawa, 1980). Centenary
 
successfully contested the riding of Prescott as a tory, but he died in February 1835 of consumption while attending the assembly. He had been sheriff of the Ottawa District since 1822
1840 to 1850 the community set up a number of foundations. After Saint-Hyacinthe, Saint-Boniface (Manitoba), and Bytown (Ottawa) [see Elisabeth
made by the Royal Engineers in the latter half of the 1820s to locate a navigable water route between Penetanguishene, Upper Canada, and the Ottawa River via Lake Simcoe. He also appointed engineer John
 
), 257–93. Guy Frégault, “La Compagnie de la Colonie,” Revue de l’université d’Ottawa, XXX (1960), 5–29, 127–49.
 
PAC, MG 19, F1, 10: 25, 153–59; RG 1, L3, 377: M6/23. Canada, Indian treaties and surrenders . . . [1680–1906] (3v., Ottawa, 1891–1912; repr. Toronto, 1971), 1. The
 
(Ottawa, 1866; réimpr. Montréal, 1971). Mandements, lettres pastorales et circulaires des évêques de Québec, Henri Têtu et C. O. Gagnon, édit. (18v. parus, Québec, 1887–  ), 2: 499
 
. 1819. Halifax almanac, 1806–9. Akins, Hist. of Halifax City, 127, 129, 148–49, 165, 271. Nathalie Clerk, Palladian style in Canadian architecture (Ottawa, 1984). A
, 1856). Hiller, “Foundation of Moravian mission.” The Moravians in Labrador (Edinburgh, 1833). H. W. Jannasch, “Reunion with Mikak,” Canadian Geographical Journal (Ottawa
-1898, ed. J. T. Saywell (Toronto, 1960). National Council of Women of Canada, Annual report ([Ottawa]), 1897. J. R. Sullivan and N. R. Ball, Growing to serve: a history
 
Indians – mostly Ojibwas, Potawatomis, and Ottawas, whose languages were closely related to that of the Algonkins, and some Iroquois from Caughnawaga – was especially effective. In Moncoq
 
), anniversary number, September 1895: 7–9. St. John Daily Sun, 1 Jan. 1897. J. R. March, “Nova Scotia–New Brunswick boundary,” Canadian Surveyor (Ottawa
 
three missionaries it included 12 men, voyageurs and servants, divided among four birch-bark canoes. The travellers followed the traditional route up the Ottawa and reached Michilimackinac on 8
Upper Canada in 1830 and worked as a shantyman in Ottawa River lumber camps; he settled in 1841 on a free-grant farm of 50 rocky acres near Chatsworth, south of Georgian Bay, and married Letitia
 
Morand are found in the Henry Birks Collection of Silver at the National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa), the Musée du Québec (Québec), the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, the McCord Museum, and various churches
 
year later, government leader in the upper house as well. As leader he vigorously defended the administration’s demands on Ottawa for better financial terms to a hard-pressed province, sometimes
 
–1921,” Manitoba Hist. (Winnipeg), no.22 (autumn 1991): 2–15. Labour Gazette (Ottawa), 1 (1900–1): 217. McCormack, Reformers, rebels, and revolutionaries
 Ottawa. A devoted family man, Motz died at the age of 81 in 1911. As a tribute to his accomplishments, he was inducted into the Waterloo County Hall of
industrial kingdom of God, ed. Leslie Armour and Elizabeth Trott, which was issued at Ottawa in 1982. Major sources for Murray’s
treaties and surrenders . . . (3v., Ottawa, 1891–1912; repr. Toronto, 1971), I. The correspondence of Lieut. Governor John Graves Simcoe, with allied documents
 
, Memoirs of Rt. Rev. Edmund Burke, bishop of Zion, first vicar apostolic of Nova Scotia (Ottawa, 1894). [Sagart Arisaig (Ronald MacGillivray)], History of Antigonish, ed
 
summary of the Dunvegan journal, 1806 (Ottawa, 1929).
1886, and the following month he was placed in charge of Ross’s newly established real estate office while Ross, mp for Lisgar, Man., was absent in Ottawa. By 1 June
age of 54. He had been living in Aylmer, in the Ottawa River region. As a sign of respect for him the members of the Montreal and Quebec bars wore mourning for 30 days. His son Thomas was named judge of
 
., no.187, Ottawa, 1985). G. E. Reaman, A history of agriculture in Ontario (2v., [Toronto, 1970]). Thaddeus Smith, Point au Pelee Island: a historical sketch of and an account of the
believed that the first step towards returning more Nova Scotian Conservatives to Ottawa was to get control of the legislature in Halifax. After
1651 to 1700 (of 2710)
1...32  33  34  35  36  ...55