McCulloch* from turning Pictou Academy into a college, and as principal law officer he drafted the restrictive charter of the academy in 1820. His opposition in 1819 to the otherwise almost unanimous
religious and educational edifices. In fact he built a number of schools, convents, and colleges, for some of which Viau had signed contracts before their partnership was formed. With the great increase in
a ba from Trinity College, Dublin, in 1828. From that year until 1831 he studied medicine in Dublin, but he apparently gave it up because he was repelled by the
, a wheelwright, and Geneviève Chabot; d. there 26 Feb. 1881.
Charles-Félix Cazeau began classical studies in 1819 at the Collège de
Head. In his first session in the House of Assembly, Draper was active, and his position on such thorny problems as the clergy reserves and the charter of King’s College early indicated a man
Dale* instilled in him a love of language and literature. In 1879 he entered University College, Toronto; he graduated in 1883, obtaining a ba in classics and English
1880 he obtained a scholarship and proceeded to Charlottetown for two years of study at Prince of Wales College [see Alexander
revealed a penchant for collecting pictures and historical memorabilia, an aptitude for swimming, hockey, and rowing, and a love for parades and decorations. At Upper Canada College in Toronto, where he was
lds from the Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Ontario in 1874, he opened his own practice, which he moved in the 1880s to the corner of Elm and Yonge streets, in the core of the city
the priesthood at Bishop’s College in Lennoxville (Sherbrooke) and received a ba in 1894. He would not complete his ma (also from Bishop’s
benches of one of these schools. On finishing his elementary education he did not go to a classical college as had his elder brother Joseph, who wanted to be a priest. In 1851, at 17 years of age, he chose
education, Mary decided that Ruby, who was older, would take a job as a teacher at a Presbyterian college in Ottawa – Mary had embraced Presbyterianism after her marriage – and send a large portion
Lachine, and then in 1847 went to Edinburgh for a medical degree; at his death in 1858 he was a professor of botany at McGill College in Montreal. For his father, Tadoussac was “an extended, troublesome
assistant general, to the Collège Sainte-Marie in Montreal, where Bishop Édouard-Charles Fabre* was taking part in a celebration. The meeting
1844 from Yale College; he then studied law in a St Catharines office, at King’s College in Toronto, which granted him a ba ad eundem in 1845, and at Harvard
received his graduation diploma from the Collège Sainte-Marie. Subsequently, probably in 1874, he began studying law at McGill College. Having obtained his degree in 1878, he was called to the bar of the
.
At the age of ten, Cléophas Beausoleil began his primary schooling at the Collège Saint-Joseph in Berthier-en-Haut (Berthierville). From 1857 to 1862 he was enrolled in the classical program at the
-Smiths’ three sons, and that year the family moved to London, Ont. At Alma Ladies’ College in nearby St Thomas, Bell-Smith was appointed art director and professor of elocution and was soon taken on
introducing Protestantism to his people at the Saint-François-de-Sales (Odanak) mission, which was attached to Bellenger’s parish. Masta, while a student at Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H., had been an
principal of the Nova Scotia Technical College positioned the young couple to become leaders in progressive education and social reform. During 1908–9, for example, May Sexton campaigned vigorously but