that brought Dr Martin to the Arctic.)
In 1930 Diamond Jenness, then working at the National Museum in Ottawa, received a radio message from
800 Mullins Street in Montreal. Soon Smart had additional factories in Toronto and Winnipeg and, after he was joined by James William Woods of Ottawa around 1913, Smart-Woods Limited built more
local operators. In 1872, for instance, he directed attention to the phosphate deposits of Ottawa County, Que., where a number of mines were subsequently worked at considerable profit during the phosphate
had two daughters; d. 31 Aug. 1909 in Ottawa.
In 1836 Samuel Henry Strong immigrated to the Canadas with his family. His father, who was
tempt employees – let alone settlers – to move somewhere as distant as the Ottawa region. He finally found his eight associates at Woburn and the surrounding area, choosing them from among and
railway bridge in Ottawa and another for portions of the Dufferin Terrace at Quebec. He went into partnership in 1878 with his compatriot Edward Curran and another contractor, John Sullivan of Montreal
. Although Lady Melgund was reluctant to exchange the Court of St James’s for Rideau Hall in Ottawa, she greatly enjoyed her two years’ residence in Canada, the birthplace of her eldest child. In
. 1921 in Ottawa and was buried in Mount Royal Cemetery in Outremont (Montreal).
Not much is known about Jules Helbronner’s life before
in 1981.
On his arrival in Bytown (Ottawa), Upper Canada, in August 1826, Mactaggart was assigned to check the route recommended by Samuel
, in Ottawa, Jemima Jane (Jennie) Mather, daughter of John Mather*, and they had a daughter; d. there 19 March 1930
College of Ottawa, where he showed his enthusiasm for athletics, drama, and literature, and edited the student newspaper called the Owl. After graduating with a ba in
Chicago; m. secondly 9 Dec. 1920 Jessie Allan in Geneva; there were no children of either marriage; d. 30 Dec. 1931 in Ottawa
-Laurent’s quiet, scholarly arguments matched the style of the British law lords. In 1928 the JCPC, which rarely gave compliments, praised his illuminating and able argument on behalf of Ottawa in a conflict
. thirdly 3 July 1889 Isabelle Cameron in Regina, and they had two sons, one of whom was Arthur Stanley; d. 13 Oct. 1902 in Ottawa
Bouillon*, an architect and priest who would commission him to do some 60 works in wood for decorating the chancel of Notre-Dame Cathedral in Ottawa. Olindo
Ottawa.
The family of W. H. Pope had a pleasant house and grounds a mile out of Charlottetown. Most families of his standing sent their children to
Morris v. Henderson, which was heard in Ottawa’s assize court. He was asked to testify that two people relevant to the lawsuit had died many years earlier. His appearance was covered in the
.
Elkanah Billings was born on his father’s farm at Gloucester. At the gates of Ottawa, an urban centre named Billings’ Bridge recalls the site of the Billings’ family home. The second son of a family of nine
Cannon*, a lawyer, and Marie-Hermine-Aurélie-Alida Dumoulin; m. 20 April 1904 Corinne Fitzpatrick in Ottawa, and they had five children; d. there 25 Dec. 1939 and was buried three
at the College of Ottawa and the Saint-Joseph scholasticate. He took his perpetual vows in 1884, received the tonsure two years later, and was ordained priest in Ottawa by Bishop Vital-Justin
), and they had nine children; d. 10 May 1896 in Ottawa.
From an early age Télesphore Fournier displayed real ability. In 1835 his father
through social diplomacy. He visited the United States and its leaders, and entertained them in Quebec and Ottawa. As a result, agreements were signed on boundary questions, the North Atlantic fisheries
explorations, had established relations with the Algonquin in the upper reaches of the Ottawa (Outaouais) River. It is presumed that, in his desire to strengthen the alliance that was only just taking shape, it
their official residences in Ottawa and Quebec. Lady Stanley wrote to her sister, “We are up to now very much pleased with our new homes & all the people both at Ottawa & Quebec are most
Smeaton*; d. 21 April 1888 at Ottawa, Ont.
Thomas White was educated at the High School of Montreal before following his father in the
church and the founding of a school at Loretteville. He served as moderator of Montreal and Ottawa presbytery in 1904 and in 1913 addressed the church’s General Assembly on the subject of French Canadian
. Calgary Herald, 11 Jan. 1893. Gaston Carrière, Dictionnaire biographique des oblats de Marie-Immaculée au Canada (3v., Ottawa, 1976–79), 1: 26–27. [J.-P.-A.] Benoît, Vie de Mgr
Florence A. McTavish in Chicago; d. 17 July 1891 in Ottawa, and was buried five days later in Winnipeg.
Born in a military camp where his
., and they had four sons and one daughter; m. secondly 4 Sept. 1929 Mallissa Mae Clements (1875–1954), widow of Harry Herbert Francisco and Henry Halladay, in Ottawa; they had no children; d
sucker clan of either the Ottawas or the Northern Ojibwas; fl. 1761–1804.
Chejauk’s life spanned the hectic days of the middle and late 18th century when
James Cockburn, a merchant, and Sarah Turnbull; m. 14 Dec. 1854 Isabella Susan Patterson (d. 1862), and they had three children; d. 14 Aug. 1883 at Ottawa, Ont
Crean secured a position in Ottawa, from 4 Feb. 1908, as a clerk with the railway and swamplands branch of the federal Department of the Interior
deputation being sent to Ottawa “to look after Edmonton’s interest” in the negotiation of the terms by which the North-West Territories would become one or more provinces
for providing the supplies needed to build the canals on the Ottawa River. He had purchased a large estate in 1827 near the eastern end of these works, at the village of Carillon. According to a
Counties Junction Railway (later the South Eastern Railway), vice-president and managing director of the Canada Central Railway, managing director of the Brockville and Ottawa Railway, and director of the
Haggart and Isabella Graham; m. there 26 May 1861 Caroline Douglas, and they had two children; d. 13 March 1913 in Ottawa and was buried in Perth
prominent loyalist family in Brockville. The young couple moved to Ottawa, where Chilion, an architect and engineer, was working on the new Parliament Buildings [see Thomas
.]
Can., Dept. of National Defence, National Defence Headquarters, Directorate of Hist. (Ottawa), Biog. file. Canadian War Museum Arch. (Ottawa), Biog. file. Commonwealth War Graves Commission (Maidenhead
be located in the Canadian capital, which was in Toronto from 1855 to 1859 and in Quebec from 1859 to 1865. When the capital moved to Ottawa, the Juliens went there too. Henri had most of his primary
Mather of Ottawa hired him on 15 May 1888 as business manager of the Lake of the Woods Milling Company, at Keewatin, but by 1890, after a dispute with managing director Alexander Mitchell
territory between Georgian Bay and the Ottawa River. Similarly, in A short treatise on the milk-weed, or silk-weed, and the Canadian nettle . . . (1867), he claimed that
of command was necessary to prevent the Ottawa Indians from coming to terms with the Iroquois, but the intendant
Carmichael Lamont and Margaret Robson Henderson, farmers; m. 21 Oct. 1899 Margaret Murray Johnston in Toronto, and they had a son, who died young, and a daughter; d. 10 March 1936 in Ottawa
civil, Pleyber-Christ, 16 juin 1854. Arch. Deschâtelets, Oblats de Marie-Immaculée (Ottawa), HPK 5301-20 (brochures, articles, études et corr. de J.-M.-R. Le Jeune). Kamloops Sentinel (Kamloops
. Nevertheless, since the apostolic delegate approved of it, Legal believed that it had to be upheld. In February 1905 Legal was interviewed for the newspaper United Canada (Ottawa). He expressed his
insensitive government in Ottawa. But when the resistance became militant in the spring of 1885, Letendre and the middle class dissociated themselves from the “revolutionaries.” He did not openly criticize the
daughters and two sons; d. 18 Dec. 1917 in Ottawa.
If Isabel Mackenzie were to be judged on her own accomplishments, she would fade into
.
Maunsell became commander of Military District No.4 in Ottawa in 1881. By then he had become respected for his frank and often critical views on militia policy. In 1883 the government decided to form
from the timber auction held in Ottawa on 27 June 1908, together with subsequent timber dues and ground-rent, netted the band, then numbering 81 souls, the sum of $1.1 million, and
Affairs, Ottawa, to Victoria Caillou, 6 Nov. 1984, listing chief and councillors for Sucker Creek Band, 1899–1983, extracted from annuity lists; Louise Zuk, “Documentation relating to the historical