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good God to gild your Brother’s Evening Sky”: “I am connected with as worthy a People as I ever knew.” Wallace Brown
 
Advertiser a few days later Thomas Storrow Brown* wrote: “We are in Canada so accustomed to see things done ill, that a work well done is
, 1815–34 (Firth). Armstrong, Handbook of Upper Canadian chronology. Brown’s Toronto city and Home District directory, 1846–7 (Toronto, 1846). Brown’s Toronto general
Conservative government, defeating his Reform opponent, Frederick Ferguson, who was supported by George Brown* in accusing Conger of holding on to his
. According to George Stayley Brown, Simon d’Entremont did not go to school, there being none at the time, but he nevertheless managed to learn to express himself in writing in both French and English and to
conventions of 1857 and 1859. With George Brown*, William McDougall*, and others
(Varennes, Que.), son of Paul Guibord, dit Archambault, a labourer, and Marie-Anne Célerier, dit Roch; m. 2 June 1828 Henriette Brown in the parish of Notre-Dame de
harbour pilots or fishermen, a number of them rose to levels of international prominence in this sport. It was anticipated that Hamm would carry on in the traditions of such local heroes as George Brown and
 
(Toronto), 20 Jan. 1873. Patriot (Toronto), 30 Jan., 4 Sept. 1838. Town of York, 1815–1834 (Firth). Brown’s Toronto general directory, 1856
 
. Jennifer S. H. Brown PAC, Reference file 341-1 (letters between F.-J
northern interior of B.C. (1904), 151–53, 200. G. D. Brown, “A further note on Captain St. Paul,” BCHQ, III (1939), 223–24. G. D. Brown and W. K. Lamb, “Captain St
); 4-6 (Bank of Yarmouth); 4-60 (Western Counties Railway); Clement Doane, cemetery records; Lovitt geneal., comp. G. S. Brown. Halifax Herald, 1887. Morning Chronicle
 
George Brown* from a scurrilous personal attack by William Frederick Powell led to a break with the government. On 30 June 1858 Sheppard
 
. H. Brown AO, MU 2197, instruments transmitting cases from Lower to
Grit journalist, McDougall challenged the mainstream reform position articulated by George Brown*’s Globe (Toronto). But at the same
 
Adam Brown, a fellow Scot and his brother-in-law, as a junior partner. Brown represented the company in public and political affairs while McLaren forged extensive business links. After 1845 McLaren was
New York Giants of the National League and ended the season with 5 wins and 12 losses. In 1884 he played with the St Louis Browns of the American Association. He pitched in 17 games
 
. He left Plymouth on board the Swallow, to whose captain, Maurice Browne, he later paid tribute, and had, he said later, a fine voyage, all the men being in good health when they entered St
). Brown’s Toronto general directory, 1856 . . . (Toronto, 1856). Brown’s Toronto general directory, 1861 . . . (Toronto, 1861). Hist. of Toronto and
Sutherland moved to Manitoba, where he planned to pursue a career in law. He was articled to the firm of F. A. Brown in Carman and then to that of William Egerton Perdue and Thomas Robinson in Winnipeg
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