1701 to 1750 (of 2710)
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“something better” than the Mac and two other popular apples. The Mac’s popularizer was William Terrill Macoun, dominion horticulturist, whose work at the Central Experimental Farm in Ottawa affirmed the
 
Hist. Parks and Sites Branch, Manuscript Report, no.335, Ottawa, 1978). Allen, “British Indian Dept.,” Canadian Hist. Sites, no.14; “Canadians on the upper Mississippi: the
Marks each made annual pilgrimages to Ottawa to make sure the other would not secure an advantage. In 1881 the township of Neebing, in which the so-called McKellar Ward was located, withdrew
 
(Ottawa), 69 (1983): 283–347. Karlis Karklins, “Nottingham House: the Hudson’s Bay Company in Athabasca, 1802–1806,” Hist. and Archaeology, 69: 3–281.
Scotia, 1802–15, comp. Margaret Ells (Halifax, 1936). S. T. Rand, Micmac place-names in the Maritime provinces and Gaspe Peninsula recorded between 1852 and 1890 (Ottawa, 1919). Ann
 
journal, 1806 (Ottawa, 1929), 78, 122–34.
his case to a great extent on the government’s success in dealing with Ottawa and on its fiscal responsibility. The result was more eventful than the campaign. The government survived by the narrowest
 
, I44; I72; RG 31, A1, 1871, Toronto, St David’s Ward. Canadian Labor Union, Proceedings of the Canadian Labor Union congresses, 1873–77, comp. L. E. Wismer (Ottawa, 1951
 
, Mémoires (Ottawa, 1866), 517, 544–52. É.-Z. Massicotte, “Les marionnettes au Canada, le théâtre du père Marseille,” BRH, 28 (1922): 8–13.
 
1906 Ng was asked to transfer to Ontario. He worked mostly in Toronto and at times preached in Hamilton, Ottawa, and other cities with Chinese communities. By 1909, at the request of a group in Vancouver
personal appearances elsewhere or toured her troupe to Ottawa and Hamilton. She gave several future luminaries their débuts, including John Henry Miller and Ida Van Cortland, who later managed her own
 
Lamirande, “L’implantation de l’Église catholique en Colombie-Britannique (1838–1848),” Rev. de l’univ. d’Ottawa, 28 (1958): 460–66, 486. J. B. McGloin, “John Nobili, S.J., founder of
 
. Canadian Labor Union, Proceedings of the Canadian Labor Union congresses, 1873–77, comp. L. E. Wismer (Ottawa, 1951). Toronto City Council, Minutes of proc. (Toronto), 1878–82
 
(6v., Ottawa, 1893–95), 1–5. Jan Forster, “The Maritime Olands,” Chatelaine (Toronto), 47 (1974), no.5: 40–41, 52–54, 56, 58; no.6: 30–31, 48–50, 52–53; no.7: 28–29, 48–51. G. B
the attacks of the combined opposition forces, but his government’s prospects appeared bleaker as his term wore on. He had hoped that the return of a Liberal government to Ottawa in 1921, under William
Country Club at Ardsley, N.Y., he maintained social and business connections in Canada through membership in the Rideau Club in Ottawa
[Davis*], Youmans’s successor as president, and supported by the Woman’s Journal (Ottawa), published first by Chisholm and later by Mary McKay
., Dominion Bureau of Statistics, Report on the fur farms of Canada (Ottawa), 1934. J. W. Jones, Fur-farming in Canada (Montreal, 1913). Heidi MacDonald, “The significance of the
. F. G. Stanley (Toronto, 1970). Gaston Carrière, Dictionnaire biographique des oblats de Marie-Immaculée au Canada (3v., Ottawa, 1976–79). Kay Cronin, Cross in the wilderness
. 1873), upon the resignation and removal to Ottawa of Richard William Scott*, Pardee replaced him as commissioner of crown lands, a post
to stay on until early January 1906. Filled with nostalgia, though proud of his accomplishments, Parent left Quebec and moved to Ottawa. He
 
Fauteux, “La famille Pascaud,” BRH, XXXIII (1927), 84–88. Guy Frégault, “La Compagnie de la colonie,” Revue de l’université d’Ottawa, XXX (1960), 5–29, 127–49. É.-Z
 
extensive buying trip, Patrick was a well-established, successful businessman and an agent for the Provincial Mutual and General Insurance Company. He later served as a director of the Ottawa and Prescott
 
Ontario agricultural periodicals, compiled by Edwinna von Baeyer (pamphlet enclosing microfiche, Ottawa, 1985; copy at AO). Pearce’s contributions to agricultural and horticultural literature also
 
Rapport, 1933–34: 294, 312, 337, 344, 358. J.-H. Blanchard, The Acadians of Prince Edward Island, 1720–1964 (Ottawa and Hull, Que., 1964); Acadiens de l’Île-du Prince-Édouard
 
. Aubert de Gaspé, Mémoires (1866). Antonio Drolet, Les bibliothèques canadiennes, 1604–1960 (Ottawa, 1965). Galarneau, La France devant l’opinion canadienne
been denied a place in the provincial cabinet. In so doing, Plamondon smoothed the path for the two newly elected heads of government, Wilfrid Laurier in Ottawa and Félix-Gabriel
in 1832 to Montreal, where he was employed as a printer. Two years later he entered the Methodist itinerancy in eastern Upper Canada, and in 1838 he was ordained and stationed on the Ottawa circuit
Desrivières*], commissioner for exploring the country between the Saint-Maurice and Ottawa rivers, and arbitrator in the division of customs revenues between Upper and Lower Canada. In 1827 he helped found
 
Sites branch, Manuscript report, no.207, 2v., Ottawa, 1976). Daniel Francis and Toby Morantz, Partners in furs: a history of the fur trade in eastern James Bay, 1600—1870 (Montreal and
ethnographic collection of the Victoria Memorial Museum in Ottawa. He shipped “Flathead” skulls to the University of Toronto museum and masks to Princess
PAC, MG 26, A, 116; F, 3–4; RG 31, A1, 1871, Nova Scotia. PANS, RG 7, 66–69. Parliamentary debates, Dominion of Canada . . . (3v., Ottawa, 1870–72), III. Evening Express
each meeting a count was taken of the maimed. Pozer represented Beauce in both Quebec and Ottawa, but continued none the less to retain the good will of his constituents between elections. It is said
Prescott House, Starr’s Point, Nova Scotia” (paper prepared for Can., Parks Canada, National Hist. Parks and Sites Branch, Ottawa, 1973). Eaton, Hist. of King’s County.
. After McDougall returned to Ottawa and the federal government established order in the Red River region, Provencher presumably went back to central Canada. In October 1871 he was appointed immigration
). Les travailleurs de l’Arsenal de Québec, 1879–1964 (Ottawa, 1980).
, CE301-S1, 11 oct. 1882; Centre d’arch. du Vieux-Montréal, CE601-S1, 22 août 1893. Fonds Drouin (Longueuil, Québec), Notre-Dame (Montréal), 27 juin 1901. Library and Arch. Can. (Ottawa
 
superb site he hoped to acquire by grant from the crown at the Chaudière Falls on the Ottawa River. These works were to be supplied from “an inexhaustible iron bank, a mountain of the richest
 1865 to be appointed supervising architect for the completion of the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. A “positive dearth of employment” in 1867 forced him to offer for sale a large part of his exceptional
). Directory, Guelph, 1873, 1882/83. M. [J.] Eckmann Brent, “A stitch in time: the sewing machine industry of Ontario, 1860–1897,” Material Hist. Bull. (Ottawa), 10 (1980): 1–30
(Toronto, 1989), 9–10, 17, 50, 53. J. A. Macdonald, The letters of Sir John A. Macdonald . . . , ed. J. K. Johnson and C. B. Stelmack (2v., Ottawa
Kingdom. The honorary lld awarded to him by the College of Ottawa in 1906 was a tribute, in part, to the extent to which he had combined the wide-ranging interests of a
for school and families (Oonikup [Prospector], Man., 1890) [English and Cree in parallel columns]; Indian child’s book: a primer in English and Cree languages (Ottawa, [1891?]); Cree
bataillon (canadien-français), 1914–1919; étude socio-militaire (Québec et Ottawa, 1986).
 
others of their tribe already settled at Detroit and soon after received some of their allies, the Mascoutens, who were fleeing from a war party of Ottawas and Potawatomis. When the latter arrived they
 
Sun, 27 Dec. 1917. R. C. Brown, Robert Laird Borden, a biography (2v., Toronto, 1975–80), 1. Canada Supreme Court Reports (Ottawa), 1890–1917. Hugh Johnston, The
. Can., Dept. of Militia and Defence, Report on the state of the militia (Ottawa), 1868–75. Gentleman’s Magazine and Hist. Rev. (London), 197 (January–June 1855): 194; 217
dealings. During the last 12 years of his life, Senator Robitaille divided his time between Ottawa, Quebec, and his summer home. He died on 17 Aug
. André Giroux et al., Inventaire des marchés de construction des Archives nationales du Québec à Montréal, 1800–1830 (2v., Ottawa, 1981). Montreal almanack, 1842, 1845–50, 1853–54
; 1898). H. N. Ruttan, A part of the family Ruttan, 1590–1986 (Ottawa, 1986). Standard dict. of Canadian biog. (Roberts and Tunnell).
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