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Canadas. From Buffalo the army set out in the schooner Wave for Sault Ste Marie (Ont.), a journey that occupied an entire month. One week was spent in Detroit repairing the damage done in a storm
 
both from Hudson’s Bay and Canada will find themselves in a bad neighbourhood.” In October he wrote to Banks regarding the expedition being outfitted under the command of Captain Henry Roberts and George
 
; 218/1, ff.173–76, 187–88, 190–92, 241–465 254; 218/2, ff.12–13, 17, 25–36; W.O. 71/6, 345. Coll. doc. inédits Canada et Amérique (CF), I (1888), 116–20, 170–73
 
d’un succès éphémère, 1893–1896 (Saint-Laurent, Québec, 2002), 285–86. Encyclopedia of music in Canada (Kallmann et al.), 146–47, 235, 384–85. Roger Le Moine, Deux loges
 Dec. 1840 in Sainte-Martine, near Châteauguay, Lower Canada, son of Joseph Dubuc, a farmer, and Euphémie Garand; m. 26 June 1872 Marie-Anne Hénault in Saint-Cuthbert, Que., and they had ten
 
in August. Stories were being circulated among the Indians of the region that France had sent its forces to reconquer Canada, and Ducharme tried to counter such rumours. British merchants in Montreal
usurpation of this term has only served to make us look ridiculous in the world of letters.” At the school, besides reading some of his works on the history of Canada, Dumont held the offices of treasurer
. Barry M. Gough A photograph of Eda’nsa held by the National Museums of Canada (Ottawa), neg.266, is reproduced in B. M
 
, Atlantic Canada to 1900; a history of the Anglican Church (Toronto, 1983). Past and present of Prince Edward Island . . . , ed. D. A. MacKinnon and A. B
 
familles françaises du Canada (Montréal, 1867), 371–96. Ægidius Fauteux, “Réponse,” BRH, XXXVIII (1932), 59. J.-J. Lefebvre, “La famille Fleury d’Eschambault de La Gorgendière
the English-speaking members from Canada and the United States. The French believed, in the words of Father Thomas James Hanrahan, that “religious life consisted precisely in the voluntary and life-long
 
colonial government of a Jew in Canada. He was a member of the Shearith Israel congregation in Montreal [see Jacob Raphael Cohen*]. In
had created an unusual chapter in the history of the school. In 1915 Fraser urged Canada to follow Britain’s lead in training blinded soldiers. By 1917 the school had a small group of Canadian soldiers
. After graduating from the University of Cambridge in 1883 and studying law, Frederick John Fulton immigrated to Canada in 1887. He briefly practised with Thomas Colhoun Haslett in Hamilton, Ont., and then
admission to the École Polytechnique in Montreal or the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston, Ont., or to write the examinations leading to admission into the professional bodies of technical fields
 
tours in Quebec, other francophone parts of Canada, and New England, the seasoned cast put on about 200 performances a year. From 1921 to 1951 the play was performed about 5,000 times
Mount St Elias (on the Alaska-Canada border). Lapérouse then sailed down the west coast of America, undertaking many hydrographic surveys. On 14 September he reached Monterey (Calif.), where
. In addition to numerous articles published in the local press, Gaudet is the author of “Acadian genealogy and notes,” in Public Arch. of Canada, Report concerning Canadian archives for the year
 
Society or occasionally as the Canada Company, was formed under the leadership of Captain Thomas Falconer. The association later added members from Halifax, Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Ireland
John River, and then to Canada. He returned to Port-Royal the following year before sailing to France, probably in 1692. There, in 1692 and 1693, he presumably regained the favour of the authorities, and
February 1799, his greatest service to Canada began with his promotion to vice-admiral of the white and his appointment as governor of Newfoundland in the spring of 1804
 
wars of the northwest (New Haven, Conn., 1966). Directory, Victoria, 1868–69. H. A. Innis, The fur trade in Canada: an introduction to Canadian economic history
 
Canada. William Grant, usually known as William Grant “of Three Rivers” to distinguish him from William Grant of Saint-Roch and from at least two other
New York, she and Sophia travelled to Montreal, where their reception was hardly less royal than that accorded the young Prince of Wales, who was then touring the Canadas. They visited Quebec and
). Nfld, General Assembly, Proc., 1914–30. J. R. Smallwood, I chose Canada: the memoirs of the Honourable Joseph R. “Joey” Smallwood (Toronto, 1973). G. H. Tucker, “The old N.I.W.A
GUAY, JOSEPH-DOMINIQUE, journalist, farmer, politician, and businessman; b. 14 April 1866 in Chicoutimi, Lower Canada, son
 
Vimont, in 1647, expressed his appreciation freely and reported, with respect to the last moments of this faithful soul, her “incredible satisfaction to die in Canada, in the service of these
that would make the structure look like an English cathedral. The building has proved to be an ongoing problem for the Anglican Church of Canada in Nova Scotia: a combination of design features
(Charlottetown), 1867–73. Patriot (Charlottetown), 1867–73. Bolger, P.E.I. and confederation. Canada’s smallest prov. (Bolger). W. E. MacKinnon
 
Hazeur, a bourgeois of Brouage, and Marie Proust, he immigrated to Canada in the late 1660s with two brothers, Jean-François, Sieur de Petit-Marais, and Léonard, Sieur Des Ormeaux, and two sisters
 
, Ont., and Montreal, 1982), 1. Geoffrey Bilson, A darkened house: cholera in nineteenth-century Canada (Toronto, 1980). G. E. Hart, “The Halifax Poor Man’s Friend Society, 1820–27; an
predecessor. He opposed confederation with the Dominion of Canada; he continued to use the Land Purchase Act of 1853 to buy out willing proprietors and lobbied the British government to guarantee a loan
générale des Sœurs de Sainte-Anne, 1828–1898 (Montréal, 1941), 182–85. A.-G. Morice, History of the Catholic Church in western Canada from Lake Superior to the Pacific (1659–1895
Nicholson; most important, Vetch himself may already have suggested the possibility of collaborating in an attack on Canada. In any event Hobby returned to Boston the following year and made his
almanack . . . (Charlottetown), 1853. The Prince Edward Island calendar . . . (Charlottetown), 1836–37, 1840–41, 1843–45, 1847, 1850–51, 1855. Canada’s smallest province
were unable to meet his requirements for newsprint, and he continued to manage the mill after he had left publishing. The mill, the first in what is now Atlantic Canada, was in operation on Nine Mile
Patrick Burns, to help entertain Arthur Neville Chamberlain, a British mp and future prime minister, then on a tour of Canada
Canada before it could be seized. Renamed the Charmer, it would never return to American waters. Expanding his shipping interests, Irving had
 
“domineering Saxons” had murdered “the Welsh bards,” plundered “the records of Scotland,” and had lately made an effort in Canada “to obliterate the French.” Never, if he could help it, would the mellifluous
 
off with some Indians to build canoes. Six were constructed for the HBC, “but as Natives were the builders, and had not been fully paid for them,” independent traders from Canada persuaded the Indians
 
 April 1800 at Quebec. James Johnston, whose origins and career before he came to Canada are unknown, arrived at Quebec during or soon after
achieved greater financial returns than did their counterparts in Upper Canada, and the land could sustain a population of perhaps four million. These conclusions were widely acclaimed within the province
 
documented visit to present-day Canada. It was reported that, after being handsomely entertained by the officers at Fort Erie (Ont.), the family was in some danger as he attempted to manœuvre his canoe back
’: personal perspectives on ethnic conflict, ed. Stuart Hughes (Toronto, 1976). Stanley, Birth of western Canada. R. S. Allen, “Big Bear,” Saskatchewan Hist. (Saskatoon), 25
search of Sir John Franklin (2v., London, 1853). DNB. J.-E. Bernier, Report on the dominion of Canada government expedition to the Arctic Islands and Hudson Strait on board the
). Mount Allison Univ. Arch. (Sackville), Acc.8370, St. Ann’s and St. Paul’s Anglican Church (Sackville), reg. of marriages, 21 Aug. 1866; Parks Canada Webster Chignecto coll. NA, MG 30
 
information thus obtained, received new letters patent from the king, dated 12 Jan. 1598, appointing him lieutenant-general of the territories of Canada, Newfoundland, Labrador, and Norumbega. These
means of donations received from organizations such as the Association Catholique de la Jeunesse Canadienne-Française and the Union Saint-Joseph du Canada and from individuals, many of them responding to
sent to the Séminaire de Québec in 1808 and was ordained there in 1810. Although over the years Lambert sent several other seminarians to Lower Canada, only one other, William
 
to Montreal road. Lanctot, History of Canada, III, and Émile Salone, La colonisation de la Nouvelle-France: étude sur les origines de la nation canadienne française (Paris, 1906
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