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. In 1842 Thomas Hart accompanied his family to Perth, Upper Canada. He received his early education at the public school there and he later enrolled at Queen’s College, Kingston, from which he would
 
father taught in a public school. William enrolled in Victoria College, Cobourg, at the age of 14, and after a year he left to teach school in Northumberland County. In 1869 he entered Knox College
 
. Alexander Ferrie Kemp received his education at the University of Edinburgh and the Presbyterian College, London, England. He was appointed chaplain to the 26th Foot stationed in Bermuda by the Colonial
 
at the Collège Saint-Acheul in Amiens, France, from 1878 to 1880 and at Stonyhurst College in England, where he took philosophy and science from 1880 to 1882. On his return to Canada he joined the
Hume Nicolls spent a good deal of his early life in British North America where his father was Commanding Royal Engineer successively in Halifax and Quebec. He was educated at Oriel College, Oxford
Catholic women’s college in Toronto. That year she and Sister Austin began to pursue degrees at the University of Toronto that would enable them to offer instruction at the post-secondary level. In 1911
. The son of a Scottish settler, William Lochhead was raised on a farm in Elma Township and received his secondary education at Listowel High School. In 1881 he enrolled at McGill College, where one of
transferred to the Noviciat Saint-Louis at Avignon in the following year. He studied philosophy at the Petit Séminaire de L’Arc at Dole in 1825 and the next year became a teacher at the Collège Saint-Acheul, in
 
. With physical labour out of the question, he began his education. He went to the Bradford grammar school, graduated in 1868 from Victoria College in Cobourg with the Prince of Wales Medal for proficiency
Quebec. Fortier then taught at the college just founded by Plessis in Saint-Roch parish and at the same time served as the bishop’s secretary. In the latter capacity he was principally responsible for
school in Beaconsfield and at the Royal College of Chemistry, Henry How then became assistant to Dr Lyon Playfair, professor of chemistry at the College for Civil Engineers, Putney. How was analytical
King’s College, Aberdeen, where he obtained an am in 1831, and at the divinity faculty of the University of Aberdeen. He was appointed assistant to the minister of the Elgin
 
-Pointe (Montreal). This institution later became the Collège Saint-Raphaël. He finished his studies in 1771, but left with an unfavourable impression of the school; his father, on the other hand, held the
 John’s, the son of a leading lawyer and future premier and chief justice. In 1858 his parents sent him for schooling, not to Britain, but to Upper Canada College in Toronto. After two years there, Hoyles
 
India. Johnson received his early education at Toronto’s Model Grammar School and then at Trinity College School in Weston, which had been founded by
 
(Anglican). Business connections and family ties allied the Pryors with the political, social, and economic élite of Nova Scotia. John attended King’s College, Windsor, graduating ba
 
Canada College in Toronto, where he was head boy in 1868-69. He enrolled in University College, Toronto, the following year. Although he was not impressed with the quality of teaching, he graduated with a
ADDISON, MARGARET ELEANOR THEODORA, educator, diarist, and first dean of women at Victoria College, Toronto; b. 21 Oct. 1868
 
. Robert Harvey Warden was educated at Madras College, St Andrews, Scotland, and after moving to Upper Canada as a young man began the study of law in Toronto. In 1863 he abandoned this project to enter
. Alexander Anderson attended school in Aberdeen until 1854, when he led all of Scotland in the examinations for his year and won a scholarship to Moray House Training College for teachers in Edinburgh. He
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