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                  camps opposite Fredericton. Gabe’s own hunting territory was reportedly between the Salmon and Gaspereau rivers, although he guided “sports” throughout most of the Saint John waters and those of the
                  in Dundee, Scotland, son of John Alexander and Murina Mudie; m. first 1838 Margaret Kyle in Dundee, and they had five sons and two daughters; m secondly 22 May 1884 Mary Ann Patton in
                   
                  ., 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
                  ), 28 April 1855. Novascotian, 15 Oct. 1840. Acadiensis. (Saint John, N.B.), 2 (1902): 39. Canadian biog. dict. Canadian men and women of the
                  children, Baby spent his early years in the parish of Saint-Vincent-de-Paul (Laval). Having begun his secondary schooling at the Petit Séminaire de Montréal, from 1847 he attended the Collège Joliette in
                   
                  Canada, and they had five sons and five daughters; m. secondly 10 Oct. 1893 in Saint-Germain
                   
                  (Saint John, N.B.), 18 July 1868. Union Advocate (Newcastle), 27 March 1907. W
                  , feminist, and office holder; b. 26 Feb. 1863 in L’Île-Verte, Lower Canada, daughter of John Edmond Barry and Aglaée Rouleau; d. unmarried 7 Jan. 1910 in Montreal
                  characterized the Baxter home. Young Richard, who had begun his education in Ireland, attended school in Toronto before enrolling in classical studies at the Séminaire de Saint-Sulpice in Montreal, where his
                   
                  . 11 July 1843 Susan Maria Wilson of Chamcook, N.B.; they had no children; d. 17 Dec. 1907 in Saint John
                  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
                  . 19 June 1845 in Saint-Félix-de-Valois, Lower Canada, son of Joseph Silvestre, dit
                   
                  . 29 June 1901 in Saint John, N.B. James Bennet’s place of birth was one of the earliest centres of the Presbyterian secession in Ireland. As
                  . 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
                  joined Fraser and nine government members to defeat Saint John’s aspirations and carry the retention of Fredericton by a margin of 20 to
                  number of eminent ornithologists, among them Elliot, Verrill, Thomas Mayo Brewer, Elliott Cones, Spencer Fullerton Baird, Henry Eeles Dresser of England, and John Krider of Philadelphia, a commercial
                  through such activities as the American whaling off Herschel Island and the Klondike gold-rush. As a regular correspondent of John Christian
                  Church, Lachine, Quebec, Canada, 1822–1947 ([Lachine, 1947]). W. H. Naylor, History of the church in Clarendon (St Johns [Saint-Jean-sur
                  .” A later note by trader Isaac Cowie describes this Boyd as a “British sportsman.” By the eve of the Red River troubles, however, Alfred Boyd was a wealthy trader. He had a store in St John’s
                  company, whose head office he quickly transferred to 61 Rue Saint-François-Xavier in Montreal, had two factories in Ontario: one for black powder in Cumminsville and one for nitroglycerin near Kingston
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