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. In 1835 Fothergill initiated a scheme that rivalled in grandeur the founding of King’s College (University of Toronto). For two years, at first in collaboration with William Rees and then alone, he
 
taught in the colleges of France at the time. Franquelin’s career at Quebec suggests that when coming to Canada he brought with him his drafting instruments, paints, and brushes. Thus he was the only
. At age 12 he entered the Collège Joliette, where he spent four years completing the classical studies program. In 1850 he moved to Montreal. There, he studied music with John G. Seebold and made
the title of Officier de l’Instruction Publique in 1927 and the College of Ottawa awarded him an honorary lld in 1928
died in infancy and one daughter; d. 12 Sept. 1892 in St Boniface, Man. Marc-Amable Girard entered the Collège de Saint-Hyacinthe
education at home. After a year at a preparatory school near Brighton, he went up to Trinity College, Cambridge, in the autumn of 1847. There he became an active and exemplary student. He took his
judicial appointment, Gowan valued the many plaudits that came his way and he accepted a number of honours. In 1884 he received an lld from Queen’s College, Kingston (where in
 
Louis* and Étienne to study at the College of New Jersey, in Princeton. The youngest son, Joseph, who was a poor
. John Wellington Gwynne came from a family of 14 children, 8 of whom lived to maturity. He entered Trinity College, Dublin, in July 1828, but left without taking a degree. With an elder brother
. By then he had been educated at Cheam School in Surrey, the University of St Andrews, and University College, Oxford, graduating with a ba in modern history and law
(2v., Philadelphia, 1951–53) and “The Modern religion of Moses Hart,” Hebrew Union College Annual (Cincinnati, Ohio), 20 (1947): 1–31. Mention must also be made of the important work
. By 1864 he was lieutenant-colonel of the Queens County Regiment of the volunteer militia, governor and trustee of Prince of Wales College, and trustee of the Lunatic Asylum. He was often to be seen
a preparatory school in Henley-on-Thames, England. Afterwards he attended Trinity College, Toronto, and then returned to England to study at the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich (London). At the age
, documents, nos rues et leurs symboles ([Sherbrooke, 1969]). Douville, Hist. du collège-séminaire de Nicolet, vol.1. Drummondville: a short story (Drummondville, 1983). [Matilda
private palace.” Hill permitted visitors – college art classes, politicians and visiting dignitaries, businessmen, friends – to view his collection on obtaining tickets from his secretary
establish temporary hospitals, including one in the governor’s residence and another at Dalhousie College, created considerable animosity. Much of the initiative behind these preventive measures, fortunately
 
Sydenham, is now in the collection of the N.B. Museum. Harvard College Library, Houghton Library, Harvard Univ. (Cambridge, Mass
was accepted into the Royal Military College of Canada (RMC) in Kingston with the highest entrance mark. His father, who had been promoted lieutenant-colonel of the 45th Battalion the year before
, 1950, 1954; and six of Joe’s diaries, of which two were written during his high-school and college years (1936–39), and one during his time at No.1 Manning Depot in Toronto (July 1940). There is also a
to the Society for the Promotion of Arts and Agriculture and to the board of trustees of Queen’s College (Rutgers University, New Brunswick, N.J.), though he never attended its sessions
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