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“King’s taste” and browning them on an open fire. During his lifetime Alex Parsons had witnessed the landing of the transatlantic cable at Heart’s
Brown*, “as my father was before me, and I have never seen any reason to change my allegiance.” One can find evidence that his political, educational, and religious connections helped him in his
Edmund Bailey O’Callaghan* and Thomas Storrow Brown*. Phelan’s
 
. Royal Gazette and the Nova Scotia Advertiser, 12 Sept. 1797, 20 March 1798. T. A. Brown, History of the American stage; containing biographical sketches of nearly
 
Brown, “Equitable jurisdiction and the Court of Chancery in Upper Canada,” Osgoode Hall Law Journal (Toronto), 21 (1983): 275–314. Canada Law Journal, 26 (1890): 290. Canadian Law
 
politician; b. 13 May 1862, 1863, or 1864 in Sydney, N.S., son of William J. Richardson and Mary Ann Brown; m. 12 Oct. 1892 Frances Amelia Wyman, and they had four daughters and five
 
cultivated a fruitful friendship with the provincial Liberals. Their primary organ, the Globe founded by George Brown*, bought its newsprint
*, reached the assembly, Robinson voted with other Tories and with George Brown and Mackenzie in opposing it, even
, Rousselot, as parish priest, complied. An ensuing civil suit ended in a judgement in favour of Guibord’s widow, Henriette Brown, in 1874, decreeing that Guibord was to be buried in the Catholic cemetery of
Brown*, revealed inhumane treatment of prisoners and its recommendations led to the dismissal of Warden Henry Smith and his son Frank [see Henry
 
. [-A.] Auclair, Saint-Jérôme de Terrebonne (Saint-Jérôme, Qué., 1934), 32. J. S. H. Brown, Strangers in blood: fur trade company families in Indian country (Vancouver and
in York (Toronto) where he successfully defended two of Cuthbert Grant*’s party of Métis, Paul Brown and François-Firmin Boucher, against
industry. On the advice of John Braun (Brown), a former employee, he purchased a roller system from the Hoerde company of Vienna in 1875. This Walzenstuhle process replaced millstones with a slower but more
. 1933. J. E. Browne, “A daughter of Canada,” Canadian Nurse (Winnipeg), 20 (1924): 617–20, 681–84, 734–36; “In memoriam: Miss Mary Agnes Snively,” Canadian Nurse (Montreal), 29
Journal (Toronto), 55 (1919): 135; 58 (1922): 159. Adam Crerar, “Ontario in the Great War,” in Canada and the First World War: essays in honour of Robert Craig Brown, ed. David MacKenzie
 
urgency of incorporating the settlement into the new confederation; again Spence petitioned the queen. He also wrote to George Brown* asking him to
 
Brown*’s] game as much as he dared to do.” Spencer was appointed to the Brampton and subsequently to the Paris circuit. Significantly, his successor as editor, Jeffers, had been one of his supporters
moderate political leader in Lower Canada during the turbulent years leading up to the “Great Coalition” of 1864 [see George Brown*; Sir
 
Browne. Sullivan’s brief career as primus inter pares of the lower-class, anti-Tory Catholics of Toronto seems virtually to have ended in
 
Thompson had maintained a moderate and independent editorial stand, he was offered support from both political factions. George Brown* and the Grits
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