1381 to 1400 (of 2876)
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family, Charles Joseph Alleyn attended school at Fermoy, Cork, and Clongowes Wood College in County Kildare, before his family immigrated to Quebec around 1837. He was called to the bar on 29 Sept
 
. After his education at King’s College, Windsor, Almon followed in his father’s footsteps and took up medicine. On 29 Oct. 1806 he began his studies at the University of Edinburgh, one of the first
, London, and Trinity College, Cambridge (ba, 1855), and was called to the bar at Lincoln’s Inn in 1857. Arriving in Victoria by way of the Panama on 26 May 1859, he
. Charles-Joseph received his elementary education at the Jesuit college in Quebec; then he studied the principles of navigation, doubtless under the direction of Martin
 
there on 10 Dec. 1669. He was educated at the Jesuit college and when he was barely 14 years old he accompanied Father
 
with Nova Scotia and frequently visited the province. Between 1836 and 1838 he actively encouraged Thomas McCulloch to accept the presidency of Dalhousie College, and advised the latter on the political
: no.52; 214 1/2G; 214 1/2H; 361 1/2; 448–50. Univ. of King’s College Arch. (Halifax), Israel Longworth, “A history of the county of Colchester, Nova Scotia” (copy at PANS). Can., Senate
. As soon as Arraud arrived he was given a class at the Sulpician college of Montreal, then, after his ordination on 26 July 1829, he became curate of the parish of Notre-Dame
 
, where he met Dr John Sebastian Helmcken*. In 1845 he became a member of the Royal College of Surgeons of England and a licentiate
occasions he was near death. When he had recovered his health, he prepared for his theological examinations at the Jesuit college in Quebec and passed them during Lent the following year
at Quebec. Young Charles-François studied under Pierre Viau, the parish priest of Cap-Saint-Ignace, then in 1813 entered the Collège de Saint
family, in 1889 Baker graduated from the College of the Bible (now Lexington Theological Seminary) in Lexington, Ky, after studying liberal arts and theology. He served as a Disciples of Christ minister
 
,” Bulletin de l’Association des Anciens Élèves du Collège de Montréal, XX (1930), 1–50. Bibliography for the revised version
 
had gone through college and had completed two years of philosophy. Whether he had done these studies in France or in his native Quebec is not known. In his early Jesuit years he made a fair impression
(Baudry) and Félicité Dubreuil; d. 11 Jan. 1876 at Montreal. Joseph-Ubalde Beaudry received his classical education at the college of
Beckwith had a cousin who left Methodism to become a nun of the Hôtel-Dieu in Montreal; she corresponded with another cousin at the Collège de Nicolet who was later to be well known as a historian, Jean
 
], and the one which recommended the establishment of what later became King’s College [see Charles Inglis
 
*, his son, was later to direct. At his request, his extensive fossil and mineral collection was given to Queen’s College, Kingston, after his death
primarily in English. In 1861 he graduated from St Francis Xavier College in Antigonish. After teaching in Richmond County and serving as principal of an academy at Church Point for four years, he was
. Richard Irvine Bentley was first educated in Newmarket and subsequently received medical training at Trinity College, graduating from the University of Toronto at the bottom of his class in June 1876
1381 to 1400 (of 2876)
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