881 to 900 (of 2876)
1...43  44  45  46  47  ...144
. Boyd achieved scholastic honours throughout his education in Toronto, at the Bay Street Academy (founded by his Scottish father), at Upper Canada College (from which he graduated in 1856), and at the
 
initially at the Collège de Lévis in 1866–69 and continued at the Petit Séminaire de Québec in 1869–75. Brousseau was remembered at the latter institution as an unassuming student, a bit rustic, but sociable
Pickering, Ont., and educated at Pickering College and the Ontario Ladies’ College in Whitby. She then taught music. In 1886 or 1887 the family moved to Toronto after a split in the Quaker community in
 
Saunders* to inquire into the state of King’s College, Fredericton [see Edwin Jacob]. They examined the
completed it in Rome from 1876 to 1878. Residing at the French seminary, he studied theology at the Roman College and canon law at Apollinaris College. He was ordained priest at the basilica of St John
College (Northampton, Mass.); the Odell Shepard coll. and W. I. Morse Canadiana coll. in Harvard College Library, Houghton Library, Dept. of
. Continuing to compete with Harris, he successfully secured contracts for the new Prince Edward Island Hospital and Prince of Wales College [see Alexander
years later he received an ab from Hanover College in Indiana (which later awarded him an am and a dd) and then
carried both his message and Roberts’s example. It was probably Collins who, in May 1881, provided the copy of Orion that so inspired another young poet, Trinity College student Archibald
, in Bytown (Ottawa), she had been in ten parsonages. She finished her education at the Wesleyan Ladies’ College in Dundas. When she was at home, she and her brother John R. ran their father’s
public schools in Halifax, the preparatory school at Horton Academy in Wolfville, and the Halifax Business College and Writing Academy. After graduation he worked for a year with a Halifax grocery firm
. Wilfrid Derome attended the Petit Séminaire de Montréal from 1890 to 1893 and the Collège Sainte-Marie in Montreal between 1893 and 1896. He completed his classical studies at the Collège Joliette in 1898
Peerless Press to print the college calendar, the Canadian Jesuits' yearly Catalogus . . . , and eventually and most important of all, the Canadian
mla for Kamouraska, and Édouard Quertier*, the curé of Saint-Denis, sponsored Dionne’s studies at the Collège de Sainte-Anne-de-la
active in securing the services of an itinerant minister in 1884 and in establishing a church two years later. His interest in church and education led to his support of the founding of Alberta College in
 
countryside to help when it came time to formulate policy. Among other initiatives, he urged reforms to improve and popularize the agricultural college and farm at Guelph after a ministerial visit in 1888
 
education at Belfast College, the universities of Glasgow and Edinburgh, and New College in Edinburgh. His education was reflected in the high literary quality of his later writings and speeches. Elder
of founding a college put forward by Jean-Baptiste Meilleur*, and even resigned as secretary of the fabrique. Despite this
to attend the county grammar school at Chatham, and from 1850 to 1855 to pursue theological studies at the Free Church College in Halifax, where he took the prize in classics. After teaching for a
urgent need of good administrators. After spending a year as bursar at the noviciate in Lachine, he was appointed procurator at the College of Ottawa, where he remained from 1882 until 1891. During this
881 to 900 (of 2876)
1...43  44  45  46  47  ...144