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important port in 1723 and because of its role in shipping to America, he no doubt retained his interest in both Canada and Louisiana. Though the record of his remaining years is spotty, it would seem that at
 
; but for reasons that are unknown to us his departure was delayed until 1683. He arrived in Quebec on 25 August and was to remain only two and a half months in Canada
 
Montreal, eldest son of Jean-Philippe Leprohon, a merchant, and Marguerite Parent; d. 19 May 1844 in Nicolet, Lower Canada. When he was
 
), 25–26. Morisset, Coup d’œil sur les arts, 27–28. Jean Palardy, Les meubles anciens du Canada français (Paris, 1963). J. R. Porter, L’art de la dorure
. James Arthur Little was an enigmatic character whose professional life remains largely shrouded by the shadows that characterized natural-resources politics in early-20th-century Canada. He was raised in
 
Canada and denouncing what he described as the cowardice and treachery of Vane. At the inquests after the disaster it became clear that Lloyd had
 
advance and social reform, 1843–1861,” Canada’s smallest prov. (Bolger), 116–19, 121; J. B. Pollard, Historical sketch of the eastern regions of New France . . . also
 
colonies of British North America. Prince Edward Island was an agricultural colony and Longworth could see no benefit in joining with Canada, whose unbounded agricultural capabilities would render the Island
–March 1908): 675–81. R. [A.] Lort, “Samuel Maclure, MRAIC, 1860–1929,” Royal Architectural Institute of Canada, Journal (Toronto), 35 (1958): 114–15. P
Lockhart; m. 8 Jan. 1840 James Hargrave*; d. 18 Sept. 1854 in Sault Ste Marie, Upper Canada
captain, he was paymaster of Military District No.11 from 27 April 1874 until 1 July 1879. He thrice joined surveys for the railway intended to link Canada with the Pacific: in 1871, 1877, and
agree on one issue: they chose to ignore a resolution passed in Canada in 1858 urging talks about the union of the British North American colonies. Manners-Sutton feared that imperial trade might be
blacks in Canada: a history (Montreal, 1971). C. [H] Fyfe, “The Countess of Huntingdon’s Connexion in nineteenth century Sierra Leone,” Sierra Leone Bull. of Religion
of the Wesleyan Methodists in Upper Canada and the Maritimes from 1780 to 1855 (Toronto, 1962). Smith, Hist. of Methodist Church.
 
., London, 1852). Illustrated Arctic News, 14 March 1851. Cooke and Holland, Exploration of northern Canada. G.B., Adm., Navy list, 1848: 204; 1849: 254; 1851: 260; 1854
 
. Bonnycastle, Newfoundland in 1842; a sequel to “The Canadas in 1841” (2v., London, 1842), 1: 135–36. McLintock, Establishment of constitutional government in Nfld., 62–77. Paul
 
, Fredericton, 1975–77). Beckwith Maxwell, Hist. of central N.B. I. E. Bill, Fifty years with the Baptist ministers and churches of the Maritime provinces of Canada
 
the documents entrusted to him. Morgann’s mission to Canada was a major factor in the re-establishment through the Quebec Act in 1774 of most of the
 
Advertiser (Philadelphia), 4 July 1744. J. R. Dunn, The militia in Île Royale (Canada, National Historic Sites Service Manuscript Report, 31, [Ottawa, n.d.]). McLennan
Baker Library, R. G. Dun & Co. credit ledger, Canada, 10. GRO (Edinburgh), Rothesay, reg. of births and baptisms, 27 Sept. 1829. [T. R.] Bennett, Report of judge Bennett
. Windsor, “Historical writing in Canada to 1920,” Lit. hist. of Can. (Klinck), 208–50.
 
 March, 20 April 1841; 28 March, 4 April 1843; 27 Aug. 1844; 23 Feb., 23 March, 18 May 1847; 21 March 1849; 22 April 1851. Canada’s smallest prov
. Evidently McCrosson had immigrated to Lower Canada as a youth of 19 in 1846 and settled in Montreal, taking up the trade of hatter. Becoming knowledgeable in the fur trade, he travelled to Europe for his
, “Charity in the east: sectarianism, ethnicity and gender in Saint John, New Brunswick, schools,” in Changing habits: women’s religious orders in Canada, ed. E. M. Smyth (Ottawa, 2007), 38–68
 
to victory. The new government’s efforts to secure financial assistance from Britain and Canada led to the appointment of the Newfoundland royal commission, chaired by Lord Amulree. Its 1933
 
Immaculée (Marseille; Paris), 1 (1862)–40 (1900). A.-G. Morice, History of the Catholic Church in western Canada from Lake Superior to the Pacific (1659–1895) (2v., Toronto, 1910), 2
, A narrow vision: Duncan Campbell Scott and the administration of Indian Affairs in Canada (Vancouver, 1986).
with Canada in seconding the nomination of James Lowe as a candidate for the Legislative Council. McKenzie died at his home of heart disease. Beset by
college connected to McGill University. Along with other Vancouver businessmen who felt that Canada’s central banks were not adequately supporting
 
special reference to western Washington, British Columbia, and Alaska (Philadelphia and Boston, [1912]). C. L. Cleverdon, The woman suffrage movement in Canada, intro. Ramsay
 
Pécaudy* de Contrecoeur, and a score of the best soldiers in Canada to help Subercase, who was expecting to be attacked by the English at Port-Royal in Acadia (Annapolis Royal, N.S.). Nescambiouit’s
 
States, and Canada, in September 1888 the commission, at Moses Harvey’s suggestion, offered the superintendent’s position to Nielsen. As Harvey wrote in the Evening Mercury, Nielsen was
: à l’église de Notre-Dame de Montréal, le 29 juin 1892 (Montréal, 1892); L’abbaye de Notre-Dame du lac des Deux Montagnes et l’Ordre de Cîteaux au Canada et dans les États-Unis
Canada, in 1836 and learned the trade of carpenter in London before moving to Ingersoll in 1850. Ingersoll was incorporated as a village in 1852 and it soon became a centre for a hardwood lumber trade as
OUELLET, DAVID, architect and wood-carver; b. 15 Sept. 1844 in La Malbaie, Lower Canada, son of
 
” (ma thesis, Memorial Univ. of Nfld., St John’s, 1981). J. J. Mannion, Irish settlements in eastern Canada; a study of cultural transfer and adaptation ([Toronto], 1974), 65
 
, 12 June, 4 Sept. 1824; 4 Feb. 1830. Scribbler (Montreal), 13, 24 June 1824. Charles Lipton, Histoire du syndicalisme au Canada et au Québec, 1827–1859
 
, 1901). J. M. Bumsted, “Church and state in Maritime Canada, 1749–1807,” CHA Hist. papers, 1967: 41–58. Neil MacKinnon, “Nova Scotia loyalists, 1783–1785,” SH, no.4
, 10 févr. 1919, 8 oct. 1936. BCF, 1933: 180. Canada Gazette, 27 Sept. 1919: 972–73. Martine Côté, “Industrialisation et urbanisation à Montmagny, 1883–1930
founding of the second British empire, 1763–1793 (2v., London and New York, 1964), II, 295–97. MacNutt, Atlantic provinces. R. W. Winks, The blacks in Canada
John Ross Robertson*] in September 1917, when centralized cooperative newsgathering effectively got its start in Canada. He served as the
. The Catholic Church eulogized her as a true apostle and extolled her contributions to the evangelization of First Nations and Métis in western Canada. Among the Cree, her legacy may be more complicated
by early 1873 virtually everyone had accepted union with Canada as the colony’s only practicable alternative to bankruptcy. For Pope the immediate political consequences of the railway were disastrous
Powell’s attempts at theatrical management in Boston, Prince Edward invited him to Halifax to assist in “elevating the public and private morals of the community.” In 1789 Canada’s first regular theatre had
 
,” 182–95. Tousignant, “La genèse et l’avènement de la constitution de 1791,” 309–10. Hare, “L’Assemblée législative du Bas-Canada,” RHAF, 27: 375–76.
. Allaire, Histoire de la paroisse de Saint-Denis-sur-Richelieu (Canada) (Saint-Hyacinthe, Qué., 1905), 256. Julienne Barnard, Mémoires Chapais; documentation, correspondance
(Loretteville), Lower Canada, son of Michel Racine, a blacksmith, and Louise Pepin; d. 17 July 1893 in Sherbrooke, Que. The son of a poor family
 
Indians of eastern Canada (Minneapolis, Minn., 1955). L. F. S. Upton, “Colonists and Micmacs,” Journal of Canadian Studies, 10 (1975), no.3: 44–56; “Indians and Islanders: the
, local superior, and educator; b. 10 Nov. 1846 in L’Acadie, Lower Canada, daughter of François Ranger and Geneviève Bourassa; d. 30 March 1934 in Saint-Basile (Edmundston), N.B., and
 
Liverpool, he had purchased the large estate of Bromborough Hall in Cheshire, where he engaged in cattle breeding and other rural pursuits. In 1857 he toured Canada and the United States with his family and
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