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classical education at the college of Montreal, Charles-Christophe Malhiot studied medicine under Dr Robert Nelson
 
behalf of, education as early as 1819 led to an offer for him to move to Waterville (Maine), where he was to have helped with the development of Colby College, the Baptist college there
sons and one daughter survived him; d. 1 May 1930 in Montreal. Charles Marchand attended the Collège de L’Assomption from 1902 to 1906
Masson*, seigneur of Terrebonne, and Marie-Geneviève-Sophie Raymond, founder of Collège Masson at Terrebonne in 1847; brother of Louis
. Thomas Rodman Merritt was probably born at the home of his maternal grandparents in Mayville. He was educated at Upper Canada College in Toronto in 1837–38 and at Grantham Academy in St Catharines in
 
Collège de Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière in Lower Canada, where he remained for eight years. Michaud was ordained in Saint John, N.B., on 16 June 1867
 
Pharmacy Act of 1871. The act created the Ontario College of Pharmacy as a regulatory body with the power to issue licences to those entitled to practise
 
. James Andrews Miller was educated in Galt, Simcoe, and Toronto, and in 1859 he received a ba with honours in classics and mathematics from Trinity College, Toronto. He
 
. He first resided at the college, then in 1696 he assisted Joseph-Louis Germain in his ministry at Lorette
 
. James Monk was educated at Eton College and by 1736 had emigrated to Boston where he was set up as a shopkeeper and merchant. He enjoyed prosperity for many years, but eventually was “unfortunate in trade
, go to Great Britain. Moreover, the proposed university, King’s College (University of Toronto), seemed destined under Strachan to become a bastion of Anglican power and yet another affront to his
 
). John Moser attended Horton Academy and Acadia College in Wolfville, N.S., graduating with a ba in 1848. In 1853 he completed a three-year course of training for the Baptist
 
MOWAT, JOHN BOWER, Presbyterian minister and college professor; b. 8 June 1825 in Kingston, Upper Canada, son of John
 
College in Halifax in 1848, and served as its chairman (1852–61) and as a board member (1864–67). From 1849 to 1867 he was a member of the board for Dalhousie College, and from 1852 to 1865 a school
College, Aberdeen. McAskill was no larger than other children as a boy, but he kept growing. At 14 he became known as St Ann’s big boy or Gille Mor, and he continued to grow in his 20s until
teacher. In 1866 he entered St Dunstan’s College to prepare for the priesthood. Three years later he went on to the Séminaire de Saint-Sulpice in Montreal for his theological training. He was ordained
participating in the activities of the Wesleyan Ladies’ College Alumnae Association and writing for the Portfolio, the magazine of the college’s literary society. In an autobiographical article published
. Rena McLean, who was nicknamed Bird, was the daughter of a successful businessman and Conservative politician. A student at Mount Allison ladies’ college in Sackville, N.B., in 1891–92, she graduated
 
, for example, in the contentious debate over government aid to sectarian colleges [see James William Johnston*], McLelan
master at Stratford Collegiate Institute. Finally, in 1888, he enrolled in mathematics and physics at University College in the University of Toronto. He studied under physics professor James
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