DCB/DBC Mobile beta
+

Results per Page: Go
Modify search on Advanced Search page

Type of Result

      Region of Birth

          Region of Activities

              Occupations and Other Identifiers

                  41 to 60 (of 106)
                  1  2  3  4  ...6
                  assessment of LeSueur’s part, John Reads would note in 1917 that he “recognized at once the significance of the new
                  District Grammar School, Hugh was admitted to Osgoode Hall as a student in 1842 and read law with John Wilson*. He was called to the bar in November
                   
                  , John William Ritchie* and Sir William Johnston Ritchie*, both
                  , however, and there were few prospects in East Kilbride for ambitious young men. In the mid 1850s James and his elder brother John emigrated to Upper Canada. There James spent a year as a farm labourer in
                   
                  , the manager of the General Mining Association’s coalmines in Pictou County, and Elizabeth Noad Leonard; m. 15 June 1876, in Charlottetown, Florence Hope Gibson Gray, daughter of John Hamilton
                  ., 12 (1918), proc.: x–xiv. Scottish Geog. Magazine (Edinburgh), 33 (1917): 366–67. W. A. Waiser, The field naturalist: John Macoun, the Geological Survey, and natural
                  . 1916. Born in England to a merchant father and a mother from a locally prominent family, Frances Herring was educated in Reading, where she
                  on German trenches on 22 Feb. 1917. The citation read in part, “He did most excellent work in clearing an enemy’s communication trench and establishing a block in spite of heavy opposition. He
                  again,” reads a letter dated 29 Sept. 1917, “but that does not prevent me from doing my duty at the front. We must fear only the Good Lord. Here we fear nothing, except God
                  awarded the Military Cross on 14 Aug. 1917. “Finding himself the senior officer of his battalion present after reaching the final objective of an attack,” the citation read, “he showed great skill in
                  . MacGregor was brilliant, energetic, nervous, impatient. He was not willing much to suffer fools. In a senate meeting, when some colleague was blundering about a rule he would smile and say, “Read your
                  became au courant with the latest controversies in the field of medicine, including the debate between John Hughes Bennett and Thomas Laycock at Edinburgh over the value of bleeding and purging
                  , Johnson was native by birth, her father being a Mohawk of the wolf clan. The great-granddaughter of Tekahionwake (Jacob Johnson), whose name she would later adopt, and the granddaughter of John “Smoke
                  * and Eliza Ann Phelps; m. 26 Jan. 1897 John Mill Treble in Toronto; they had no children; d
                  British Columbia: historical readings, ed. W. P. Ward and R. A. J. McDonald (Vancouver, 1981), 369–95. Scholefield and Howay, British Columbia. John Schreiner, The
                  architect George Edmund Street of London and for the well-known firm of William Martin and John Henry Chamberlain in Birmingham. After reading a
                  . William Macdonald’s paternal grandfather, John MacDonald* of Glenaladale, a Roman Catholic, was the last of a line of Scottish
                  . 1 Jan. 1839 in Northamptonshire, England, daughter of John Hayr; m. 13 June 1860 Robert Jack (d
                  Laurier, apostolic delegate Donato Sbarretti y Tazza, and John Read Teefy, superior of St Michael’s College in Toronto, but O’Connor resisted and the marriage took place in the residence at
                  . 24 May 1835 in Galt (Cambridge), Upper Canada, son of John Young and Janet Bell; m. 11 Feb. 1858 Margaret McNaught in Brantford
                  41 to 60 (of 106)
                  1  2  3  4  ...6