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                  21 to 40 (of 170)
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                  Saint John, N.B., and was buried in Fredericton. The senior James Hannay emigrated
                  *, and they had ten children; d. 12 Jan. 1908 in Saint John, N.B
                  at Saint John, N.B., on 28 Aug. 1870; he was the first native of the parish of Memramcook to become a Catholic priest. Cormier
                   
                  charitable endeavours; she received financial support from Geneviève Walsh, a local philanthropist. She repeated the exercise in 1893 in Saint John, N.B., at the invitation of Bishop John
                   
                  flora was carried on by the botanical committee of the Natural History Society of New Brunswick in Saint John, chaired by Hay. Moser, along with several other New Brunswick schoolteachers who had been
                  Bayard, of Saint John, who was staying briefly in Montreal, tried to point out to this “beautiful, educated and refined” young lady “the
                  . Thomas-Alfred Bernier was educated at the Séminaire de Saint-Hyacinthe from 1857 to 1865 and then went on to study law. While articling in Saint-Hyacinthe, he worked as editor of Le Messager de
                  *, in Saint John, N.B., and they had eight children, five of whom survived him; d. 14 May 1902 in Fredericton. Archibald Fitz
                   
                  . During his career Dumaresq made a significant contribution to the appearance of the cities and towns of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. He was among the architects who flocked to Saint John, N.B., after the
                  . May 1821 in Clones, Ireland, son of James Sweeny and Mary McGuire (Macguire, Maguire); d. 25 March 1901 in Saint John
                   
                  eight years. Michaud was ordained in Saint John, N.B., on 16 June 1867 by Bishop John
                  . 27 Aug. 1830 at Quebec, son of John William (Jean-Guillaume) Peachy, a tailor, and Marie-Angélique Roussel; d
                  to 51, chose to be annexed. Along with John Lee, a ship liner and fitter, and Vital Grenier, a tinsmith, Villeneuve would represent Saint-Jean-Baptiste ward on the Montreal city council
                  . 28 April 1875 in Saint John, N.B., Maggie M. Jewett, adopted daughter of a local lumberman and shipbuilder; d. 27 Feb. 1906
                  . 1 April 1824 in Bécancour, Lower Canada, son of Louis-Zéphirin Moreau, a farmer, and Marie-Marguerite Champoux; d. 24 May 1901 in Saint-Hyacinthe
                  faubourg Saint-Jean at Quebec in 1834. Two years later he bought his first cow and set up his own business in that district. He
                  Taché*; he did all the carpentry, the carving, and a statue of John the Baptist, the patron saint of French Canadians. With its rich decoration, the vehicle bore eloquent witness to the religious and
                   
                  ., in 1860, Halifax in 1865, and Saint John, N.B., in 1866, all of them short-lived. Allain was assigned to Saint John and remained there until August 1875, when he was sent to teach at Saint-Laurent
                  . 19 June 1845 in Saint-Félix-de-Valois, Lower Canada, son of Joseph Silvestre, dit
                  had been, at least since the end of the 17th century, the site of the major village of the Maliseet of the Saint John River region. With the arrival of Father Charles-François
                  21 to 40 (of 170)
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