origins of the Public Archives of Canada,” Archivaria (Ottawa), no.15 (winter 1982–83): 16–35.
; The educational demands of democracy (Ottawa, 1901); The place of religion in the public school (Toronto, [1903]); “The educational system of Ontario: its excellencies and its
French Canadians under the Royal Institution for the Advancement of Learning, 1818–1829” (ma thesis, Univ. of Ottawa, 1964); “Royal Instit. for the Advancement of Learning
l’Instruction publique (Québec et Montréal), 3 (1859): 17. Piano music I, ed. Elaine Keillor (Ottawa, 1983). Le Canadien, 3, 24 mars 1845; 15 juin 1846
in Ottawa (in 1931, with an introduction and notes by Lawrence Johnston
summers Murray assisted Logan in surveying the Gaspé peninsula, and explored the Bonaventure, Matane, Sainte-Anne, and Saint-Jean river valleys. Most of his later mapping was in Canada West, from the Ottawa
Vancouver Island coal deposits (Ottawa, 1971). P. A. Phillips, No power greater: a century of labour in British Columbia (Vancouver, 1967). M. L. Tweedy, “The 1880 and 1881
ville de Québec, 1800–1850: un inventaire de cartes et plans (Ottawa, 1975). Desjardins, Guide parl., 137. “Les Presbytériens à Québec en 1802,” BRH, 42 (1936): 728
encouraged Macdonald’s revival as an effective leader in 1875 and shared in the resurgence of the Conservative party. Macdonald urged McCarthy to acquire hold of his riding and come to Ottawa to help. “We in
, Beauharnois; paroisse Saint-Clément; 1818–1819; histoire religieuse, histoire civile; fêtes du centenaire (Ottawa, 1920), xv. A. J. B. Milbourne, Freemasonry in the province of Quebec, 1759
.
As his business grew, McDonald became interested in the various schemes for canal improvements which proliferated in the Canadas during the 1820s and 1830s. In 1828, on a trip to Bytown (Ottawa) and
two delegations which went to Ottawa to present a defence of the workers’ stand to the government. On 21 December 2,000 strikers gathered in front of his establishment to hear him speak. The
, but for the most part before 1806, he obtained numerous small grants in Upper Canada, totalling at least 14,000 acres scattered through 12 townships in the Ottawa and St Lawrence valleys. In the
-gouverneurs et administrateurs du Canada et de ses provinces, 1604–1921 (2v., n.p., n.d.). Can., Dept. of Militia and Defence, Report on the state of the militia (Ottawa), 1883. Canadian
go to the Ottawa River where he surveyed parts of several townships and produced a large-scale plan of his work. On 24 July Lord Dorchester [Guy Carleton] established four new administrative
bankruptcy was short-lived, however, particularly since the pool’s first payment for 1930–31 (only 70 cents per bushel) was still too high as the financial crisis worsened. Ottawa
. Canadian annual rev. (Hopkins), 1919. The Canadian Patriotic Fund: a record of its activities from 1914 to 1919, comp. and ed. P. H. Morris ([Ottawa, 1920?]). London Gazette, 8
study in the evangelical spirit in the Canadas,” Social Hist. (Ottawa), 10 (1977): 59–76. Other secondary sources referring to him or treating some aspect of his life are: G
. Hudon, Rivière-Ouelle de la Bouteillerie; 3 siècles de vie (Ottawa, 1972). Lambert, “Joseph-Octave Plessis.” Lemieux, L’établissement
, 1983). A. J. H. Richardson et al., Quebec City: architects, artisans and builders (Ottawa, 1984). Trésors des communautés religieuses de
Murray*, the Liberal premier of Nova Scotia, as well as W. S. Fielding, now minister of finance in Ottawa, he got the terms he wanted, and the Dominion Iron and Steel Company Limited was
yearbook (Quebec), 1968–69: 48–52. P.-H. Hudon, Rivière-Ouelle de la Bouteillerie; 3 siècles de vie (Ottawa, 1972), 392. Adolphe Michaud, Généalogie des familles de
wanted to link Montreal with Sherbrooke to the south, Mont-Laurier to the north, and Ottawa, by way of Hull. This announcement would not only bring contributions to the party coffers – from
standard for prize-winning crafts at guild exhibitions and local fairs. She published an article in the 2 March 1912 edition of the Ottawa Journal on handicrafts as a means of nation building
. P. Stacey (5th ed., 2d rev., Ottawa, 1960). The official French accounts of this episode are in AN, Col., C11A, 11. These and other French documents, and some English accounts, are printed
d’Ottawa, III (1933), 492–513; IV (1934), 22–35; “Thomas Pichon, le `Judas’ des Acadiens (1700–1781),” Nova Francia (Paris), III (1927–28), 131–38. Gustave Lanctot, “Le
, Ottawa, 1977), 237, 275, do not adequately represent Plaw’s design because the building had been much altered by the time it was photographed. Plaw’s tombstone at the Elm Avenue cemetery in Charlottetown
newly formed Canadian Bank of Commerce the following year and served as a branch manager in Barrie, Brantford, and Ottawa. In 1876 he was made an inspector. Two years later he left the bank and, with a
Univ., Ottawa, 1993). D. C. Hamilton, “Origins of the IODE: a Canadian women’s movement for God, king and country, 1900–1925” (ma thesis, Univ. of N.B., Fredericton
Mackenzie only a week later. Following this dismissal he became provincial treasurer and two years later commissioner of crown and public lands. Restoration of the Conservatives in Ottawa in 1878
, 145. “Historic forts and trading posts of the French regime and of the English fur trading companies,” comp. Ernest Voorhis (mimeographed copy, Ottawa, 1930), 98. Le Jeune, Dictionnaire
, Trans. (Inverness, Scot.), 37 (1934–36): 59–79. G. F. G. Stanley, “The New Brunswick Fencibles,” Canadian Defence Quarterly (Ottawa), 16 (1938–39): 39–53.
” (ma thesis, Carleton Univ., Ottawa, 1982). J. M. Hitsman, The incredible War of 1812: a military history (Toronto, 1965). G. F. G. Stanley, The War of 1812: land
des actes notariés de la ville de Québec, 1871–1899 (Ottawa, 1982). Directory, Quebec, 1868–1910; Que., Prov. of, 1910–11. J. R. Porter et Jean Bélisle, La sculpture
uncertain loyalty of the western allies. In the previous war, the Ottawas and Miamis had inflicted heavy losses on the Five Nations by their repeated attacks on their western flank and had greatly contributed
Township on the east bank of the Ottawa River, securing grants for himself and his four children as well as purchasing the grants of some disbanded soldiers of the 84th Foot. He worked to attract settlers
., Ottawa, 1918–25) and “Retiring president’s address,” Engineering Instit. of Can., Journal (Montreal), 4 (1921): 198–202.
AO, RG 18-83; RG
belonged to dozens of clubs – some social, others related to sports – in Montreal, Ottawa, Quebec, the Eastern Townships, London, and New York. Business affairs had brought Ross into frequent
, The builders of the Rideau Canal, 1826–32 (Can., National Hist. Parks and Sites Branch, Manuscript report, no.185, Ottawa, 1976), 61–63. Careless, Union of the Canadas. Craig
-Saint-Jean, le grenier de la province de Québec; guide des colons (4e éd., [Ottawa], 1908), 13. Canadian annual rev., 1928–29. Canadian men and women of the time (Morgan; 1912). Paul Clark
eighth conference, ed. William Cowan (Ottawa, 1977), 36–49.
T. C. B. Boon, The Anglican Church from the Bay to the Rockies
Montréal, Service des bibliothèques, coll. spéciales, coll. Melzack. P. [-J.] Aubert de Gaspé, Mémoires (Ottawa, 1866; réimpr. Montréal, 1971). Church and state in Canada, 1627–1867
, 1910. Directory, Montreal, 1878–86. Gazette Printing Co. v. Shallow (1909), Canada Supreme Court Reports (Ottawa), 41: 339–65. J. Hamelin et al
and T. A. Moore took leading roles in organizing the seminal Social Service Congress in Ottawa. In his introduction to its published report, Shearer’s long-time friend and Social Service Council
, 40–42 Temperance Street, 1862–1875,” in Canadian Veterinary Journal (Ottawa), 28 (1987): 65–67; 18 (1977): 327–40; 16 (1975): 319–28; 31 (1990): 461–63; and 29 (1988): 754–57, respectively
Borden to several labour-dispute boards and served from 1913 to 1915 on the federal planning commission for Ottawa and Hull. Ontario premier Sir James Pliny
liability. He was active, however, at the federal level, where a similar bipartisan approach was initiated in the form of the Dominion Prohibition Committee, organized in Ottawa in December 1916. Its
–88. The Talbot papers, ed. J. H. Coyne (2v., Ottawa, 1908–9), 2: 136–38. “United Empire Loyalists: enquiry into losses and services,” AO Report, 1904: 1105, 1112. “U.C. land book
take its toll in the last decade of his life, he showed himself to be a missionary of almost boundless energy. Shortly after his arrival he started the first school west of the Ottawa River, initially in
. R. A. Pendergast, “The XY Company, 1798–1804” (phd thesis, Univ. of Ottawa, 1957), 15, 63. William Smith, The history of the