des diagnostics donnés à l’hôpital Saint-Jean-de-Dieu dans une perspective de genre, 1920–1950” (thèse de phd, univ. d’Ottawa, 2009). Service de Santé de la Cité de
him from contributing to L’Opinion publique and other periodicals, including Le Foyer domestique (1877) and L’Album des familles (1880–82), both of Ottawa; La
(Toronto, 1970). Desjardins, Guide parl. Historic forts and trading posts of the French regime and of the English fur trading companies, comp. Ernest Voorhis (roneotyped copy, Ottawa, 1930). A.-G
and private collections, in particular at the Musée du Québec (Québec) and in the Henry Birks Collection of Silver at the National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa). Several parish councils of the Quebec City
Canada and the United States are swarming with.” He was the author of a number of articles on the treatment of “drunkards” that appeared in Guelph, Toronto, and Ottawa newspapers, and in professional
.” The Conservatives in Ottawa and Queen’s Park were cowed by the Liberal timber contractor’s threats to make the documents public, and Hogarth conceded the Tories’ long-held provincial seat in Port Arthur
South. The voters returned Livingston to Ottawa in 1887, 1891, and 1896. After the Liberals won the last contest, he sat as a backbencher in Wilfrid
Susanna Humphrye, 16 June 1728: www.ancestry.ca (consulted 4 Dec. 2019). Library and Arch. Can. (Ottawa), R1002-33-9
’île aux Oies: les îles, les seigneurs, les habitants, les sites et monuments historiques (Ottawa, 1978), 89–92. Alexandre Mazas, Histoire de l’ordre royal et militaire de Saint-Louis
, they would attack the enemy with inferior numbers. The French would have had to reconsider risking this initiative had not Beaujeu harangued the Indians – local Ottawas and Delawares, along with
biographical sketches by his friends (Los Angeles, 1933). This book also appears in the National Library of Can., Peel bibliography on microfiche ([Ottawa], 1975– ), no.3328.
. Nicholson, Canadian Expeditionary Force, 1914–1919: official history of the Canadian army in the First World War (Ottawa, 1962). D. R. O’Keefe, “A brutal, soul-destroying business”: Brigadier
was also a Bytown (Ottawa) branch. In Toronto, the firm, which was kept separate from the Montreal business, underwent several changes in partnership: in 1850 it was operated with Richard Kneeshaw as
Smith), where Lyon drove the first ball in 1930.
Anglican Church of Can., Diocese of Ottawa Arch., Reg. of baptisms, no.51
[Mékaisto*], and others) during a trip to Montreal and Ottawa.
L’Heureux was dismissed by the department in 1891 after an Anglican missionary accused
honours in mathematics and physics in 1901.
She went on to work for the YWCA in London and in Ottawa, and briefly for the SVM, before becoming the
College School in Kingston and at the University of Toronto, from which he graduated ba in 1869. He then studied law, first in Ottawa and later with Robert Alexander
. 1880; CE301-S93, 9 août 1847. Library and Arch. Can. (Ottawa), R233-29-7, vol.158–259, Canada-East, dist. Quebec (38), subdist. Quebec (City) (558): 1440. Claire Paradis-Rioux, Charles Drolet
, Within reach of everyone: a history of the University School of Hygiene and the Connaught Laboratories (1v. to date, Ottawa, 1990– ). Canadian men and women of the time (Morgan; 1912). A
international exhibition, 1900 ([Montreal?, 1900]; repr. [Ottawa], 1975). E. O. S. Scholefield and F. W. Howay, British Columbia from the earliest times to the present (4v., Vancouver
,” Canadian Geographical Journal (Ottawa), 48 (January–June 1954): 178–99.
surrendered most of the Ohio valley and strategic land around Niagara, Detroit, and Michilimackinac to the Americans. Through him the Three Fires, a confederacy of Ojibwas, Ottawas, and Potawatomis, made the
.
Allan Levine
Robert Magill is the author of Grain inspection in Canada (Ottawa, 1914), The wheat situation
’œil sur les arts, 57–58; Les églises et le trésor de Varennes (Québec, 1943), 18, 21, 34–35; La peinture traditionnelle au Canada français (Ottawa, 1960), 55–58. É.-Z
). Journal of Canadian Art Hist. (Montreal), 5 (1980), no.1: 69–74. Jean Trudel, “Étude sur une statue en argent de Salomon Marion,” National Gallery of Canada, Bull. (Ottawa), 21 (1973): 3–19.
de France (Ottawa, 1991). Michel Litalien, Dans la tourmente: deux hôpitaux militaires canadiens-français dans la France en guerre (1915–1919) (Outremont [Montréal], 2003). “Obituaries
www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-CSDM-JQJY-2?i=181&cat=218510). Library and Arch. Canada (Ottawa), R10875-4-5 (Executive Council Office of the Province of Upper Canada fonds, land submissions), vol
defence of the cultural importance of the home” (ma thesis, Carleton Univ., Ottawa, 1987). Judith St John, Firm foundations: a
paid for the printing of the second number and became a regular contributor. That same year the Royal Society of Canada began meeting in Ottawa. Dawson, its first president, selected Matthew as one of
Board of Pension Commissioners, Medical Quarterly (Ottawa), 1 (1919): 279-94.
AM, MG 10, B11, box 15. LAC, RG 150
want the loyalists to settle too close to the United States; Meyers and his comrades, for their part, were appalled at the prospect of relocating to the wilderness area west of the Ottawa River that had
(Ottawa, 1976). Janet Miron, “The Women’s Historical Society of Toronto: preserving the ‘food of loyalty and the drink of patriotism’” (unpublished paper prepared for York Univ., North York [Toronto], 1996
-militaire (Québec et Ottawa, 1986). J. L. Granatstein and J. M. Hitsman, Broken promises: a history of conscription in Canada (Toronto, 1977; repr. 1985). Gilles Janson, “Le Docteur
war and disease, the Abenakis could muster fewer than 500 men, but they had Indian allies, including the Hurons of Lorette, Micmacs, Malecites, Ottawas, and the mission Iroquois of Canada, all
. W. Pue and Barry Wright (Ottawa, 1988), 249–90.
Advertiser (Philadelphia), 4 July 1744. J. R. Dunn, The militia in Île Royale (Canada, National Historic Sites Service Manuscript Report, 31, [Ottawa, n.d.]). McLennan
the eve of confederation. Investments in iron ore, plumbago, and canals led not unnaturally to an interest in railways and the advocacy of a railway from Montreal to Ottawa and thence to Perth and Parry
in power in Ontario and, from 1896, in Ottawa, his Liberal affiliations no doubt helped his career. On the instigation of justice minister Sir Oliver
international exhibition, 1900 ([Montreal?, 1900]; repr. [Ottawa?], 1975), 296–302.
City of Saint John, City Clerk’s Office, Common Council
development and legislative records; minutes of the councils of the Red River colony and the Northern Department of Rupert’s Land, ed. E. H. Oliver (2v., Ottawa, 1914–15), 1. Alexander Ross, The
Davies, the Canada Plumbago Company, for mining in Buckingham Township near Ottawa, also in 1866; and with James Hodges*, Walter
Eliza McAlister (Cassels) was a contributor to the “Notes and observations” column in the Canadian Field-Naturalist (Ottawa). Her contributions include: “Hudsonian chickadee,” 34 (1920): 99; “The
” (ma thesis, Carleton Univ., Ottawa, 1963). G. R. Stevens, Canadian National Railways (2v., Toronto and Vancouver, 1960–62). A. B. Woywitka, “Strike at Waterways,” Alberta
Booker*] and was considered a great loss when destroyed by fire in 1890. Other public buildings having McCausland glass included Government House in Toronto, the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa, and the
McCrae’s poem “In Flanders fields” and the French adaptation by Jean Pariseau, “Au champ d’honneur,” are engraved on marble plaques in the Memorial Chamber of the Peace Tower, Ottawa
(Toronto, 1979). Christian Rioux, “The Royal Regiment of Artillery in Quebec City, 1759–1871,” Parks Can., National Hist. Parks and Sites Branch, Hist. and archaeology (Ottawa), no.57 (1982), 3–146.
lobbied Ottawa to construct a major astronomical facility on Vancouver Island [see William Frederick King*]. Begun on Little
, “Charity in the east: sectarianism, ethnicity and gender in Saint John, New Brunswick, schools,” in Changing habits: women’s religious orders in Canada, ed. E. M. Smyth (Ottawa, 2007), 38–68
reports of the Dept. of Indian Affairs). [W. B.] Cheadle, Cheadle’s journal of trip across Canada, 1862–1863, ed. A. G. Doughty and Gustave Lanctot (Ottawa, 1931), 228. G. M
North West Company at Montreal in 1820, probably as an apprentice clerk, and continued with the Hudson’s Bay Company when the two companies merged the following year. He served in the Ottawa River area