Goldworth Bland* as professor of church history at Wesley College provided
Military College of Canada, and there the Barries had a house. During 1819 and 1820 Barrie built a big three-storey stone warehouse to hold the equipment of the large fleet put into reserve by the Rush–Bagot
Nantes; d. towards the end of the summer of 1698 at Beaubassin.
Abbé Baudoin studied at the Collège in Nantes, at first taking up a military
Seed Growers’ Association from 1904 to 1905 and again from 1910 to 1914 as a representative of the Manitoba Agricultural College.
After 18 years as
School and Lower Canada College, in November 1856 William George Beers was apprenticed for four years to Charles M. Dickinson, a dentist in the city. This training soon placed him in the front rank of
Jesuit college, he chose to be a sailor and became a captain in the merchant marine. His career led him to give up his rights to his father’s property, which he could not work. On 28 Aug. 1677 he
, Edmund Kemper Broadus attended Columbian College in Washington, D.C., earning his ba in 1897. He received an ma from the University of Chicago
Montreal, where he earned a ba in 1899. He then entered the city’s Presbyterian College to study for the ministry of the Presbyterian Church in Canada (PCC), and he would
from 1878 to 1881 he was a prize-winning student at the College of St Joseph [see Camille Lefebvre*] in Memramcook. He received
-Arthur Cassegrain was educated at the Collège de Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière, where he “distinguished himself by his good conduct, studiousness, and love of letters.” He then enrolled in the faculty of law
lively as a cricket.”
His intellectual alertness and eagerness to learn led him, once through primary school in his native parish, to the college of
.
One of six children born to a public-spirited Irish-Catholic family, J. J. Cassidy was educated at St Michael’s College in Toronto (1854–60) and at the Collège de Sainte-Anne-de-la
his mind, chose a legal career. His choice hardly seems surprising: it corresponded to the vogue for the liberal professions among classical college graduates at the beginning of the 19th century. With
.
George King Chisholm was educated at the Nelson common school, at Gore District grammar school in Hamilton, and at Upper Canada College in York. He married Isabella Land, granddaughter of Robert
priest, Urbain Orfroy, had introduced him to French and Latin and then sent him in 1804 to the Collège de Nicolet, which had just opened. There he had shown himself “ingenious and virtuous,” and his
, and St John’s College, Cambridge (ba in classics and mathematics, 1816; ma 1829), he was ordained priest by the bishop of London in
, who later became vicar general of the diocese of Saint-Hyacinthe and founder of the Collège Sainte-Marie-de-Monnoir, Joseph-Alexandre Crevier received a classical education at the Collège de Chambly
May 1744.
Jean-Pierre Daniélou entered the Jesuit order in Paris in 1713. He taught humanities at the Jesuit College in Quebec from 1715 to 1720
governors, he served as its president from 1852 to 1884, and as principal pro tempore of McGill College from 1853 to 1855 and chancellor of the university from 1864 to 1884. With Christopher
days of New France. He began his commercial studies at the Collège de Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière in 1867 and finished them at the Collège de Lévis in 1873. Around 1874 he went to work as a bookkeeper at