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Brown and Adam Johnston Fergusson Blair* to abolish rectories, and the June 1854 motion of Joseph
. G. P. Browne BL, Add. mss 21697–700, 21743, 21806, 21808, 21864 (copies at PAC
of Turin, Italy, another in the library of the University of Bologna, and the most complete in the John Carter Brown Library in Providence, R.I. The information, although generally close to the facts
had to defend himself publicly against accusations of misconduct levelled by two lower-ranking officers, Moses Hazen and John Brown. Congress eventually cleared Arnold of these charges, but in other
: the organization and regulation of Canadian utilities, 1830–1930 (Philadelphia, 1986). Clare Brown, “Management of the New Brunswick sport fishery during the 19th century,” Canadian
studies of the loyalists are Carol Berkin, Jonathan Sewall; odyssey of an American loyalist (New York, 1974); Wallace Brown, The good Americans: the loyalists in the American revolution
with the firm of Moreau, Archambault, Nicolls et Brown. Chapleau specialized in criminal law. During 15 years of practice he had 22 murder cases and won 21. In the court-room he spoke with
, politician, judge, and colonial administrator; b. 30 July 1754 in Marblehead, Mass., sixth child of John Chipman and Elizabeth Brown; m. 24 Oct. 1786 Elizabeth Hazen, and they had one child
Brown*, proprietor of the Montreal Gazette, refused to print an article given him by James McGill
Investigator’s naturalist, Robert Brown, an absence of several years would mean losing the opportunity to advance his interests with naval officials, and when he returned, perhaps “with a constitution much
better placed in context: Réal Bélanger, Wilfrid Laurier; quand la politique devient passion (Québec et Montréal, 1986); R. C. Brown, Robert Laird Borden, a biography (2v., Toronto
shoulders above his Nova Scotian rivals and, according to Professor Keith Thomas, above George Brown and John A
Brown* and the champions of “rep by pop,” was returned. Mercier was forced to draw one conclusion: the party spirit splitting French Canadians worked in favour of English Canada. He thus arrived at a
in 1905 on a temporary cottage dwelling and a massive stable; in late 1909 work started on the main building, formed of grey-brown sandstone with white, cast-stone trim and red tile roofs. Its
party,” CHR, LIV (1973), 228–32. G. W. Brown, “The Durham report and the Upper Canadian scene,” CHR, XX (1939), 136–60. Terry Cook, “John Beverley Robinson and the conservative
relations and on school questions held by the Grits and the Rouges, who were promoting the plan [see George Brown*], led him to foresee
. C. Brown, Canada’s National Policy, 1883–1900. a study in Canadian-American relations (Princeton, N.J., 1964); Robert Laird Borden, a biography (2v., Toronto, 1975–80), I
not yet a province. There was the call of western opportunity to be sure, but there were also risks. In his mind, however, were (and would remain) Robert Browning’s lines “Ah, but a man’s reach should
sources. The best of these with regard to Bourassa and his time remains that of historians R. C. Brown and Ramsay Cook, Canada, 1896–1921: a nation transformed (Toronto, 1974). On
World War I (Toronto, 1965). There are several articles devoted to Currie. The most important include R. C. Brown and Desmond Morton, “The embarrassing apotheosis of a ‘great Canadian’: Sir
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