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States in 1844. Two years later, for reasons that are unknown, he moved to Toronto. In the early 1850s he worked as a printer with George Brown*’s
Thornton–Brown memorandum (Montreal, 1874) and Commercial union: a study ([Ottawa?, 1888?]). Several concern his opposition to Presbyterian church union: Presbyterian union
. In May 1883 Brymner was made an associate of the RCA. The summer found him back in France, sketching at Pontaubert with British painter Frederick Brown. He also visited Yorkshire, England, where he
Brown*. He served as foreman of the mechanical department and did some local reporting before leaving the journal in 1866. For the next 11 years he pursued a commercial career in wholesale groceries
), 21 Oct. 1905: 8. M. M. Brown and Natalie Rewa, “Ottawa calendar of performance in the 1870s,” Theatre Hist. in Canada (Toronto and Kingston, Ont.), 4 (1983): 134
. W. Browne, “Father Edmund Burke,” Mid-America (Chicago), 13 (1930–31): 314–23.
Jessie Cameron Brown journeyed north to the delta of the Mackenzie River, accompanied by Cameron’s ever-present typewriter and Kodak camera, other necessary equipment, and a series of local guides and
decided to resign and was replaced for two days by a ministry led by George Brown and Antoine-Aimé Dorion; it was
Montagne (Côte de la Montagne): his only printing-press was the one that had been used by William Brown* in 1764 to launch the Quebec Gazette
. One of the charter members of the Bank of Canada in 1822, De Witt collaborated in 1833 with Thomas Storrow Brown* in petitioning for the
finance minister, for being uncooperative, and Ebenezer Brown, president of the Executive Council, for advocating a railway policy contrary to his own. Under the loose system of personal alliance which
American revolution: Thomas Brown and the South Carolina backcountry, 1775–1776,” S.C. Hist. Magazine (Charleston), 68 (1967): 201–19; 69 (1968): 44
and Kingston, 2001), 149–54. Kenneth Richmond, The permanent values in education (London, [1917]). A. M. Stella, “Obituary of Margaret Gascoigne,” Brown Book (Oxford, Eng.), December
Reform views of George Brown*, Alexander Mackenzie*, Edward
 
, author, and office holder; b. 3 Jan. 1826 in Brookfield, near Truro, N.S., eldest son of Robert Hamilton and Sophia Stevens; m. 8 Dec. 1849 Annie Brown in New York City, and they had
Partlow Brown* and Edward Philip Leacock, who sought to control the balance of power in the assembly. Harrison had already lost the support
, comp. H. J. Boam, ed. A. G. Brown (London, 1912). L. B. Dixon, The birth of the lumber industry in British Columbia ([Vancouver, 1956]; offprinted from 11 issues of the
 Joseph Pope’s confederation documents supplemented by other official material, ed. G. P. Browne (Toronto and Montreal, 1969). N.S., House of Assembly, Debates and proc., 1855–61
: 442, 567. R. C. Brown, Robert Laird Borden: a biography (2v., Toronto, 1975–80), 1: 190. Canadian annual rev., 1903–26. Canadian Engineer (Toronto and Montreal), 7 (1899
Hoyles* and Lucretia Brown; m. 7 Sept. 1842 Jean Liddell of Halifax, N.S., and they had three sons and three daughters; d. 1 Feb. 1888 at Halifax
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