1461 to 1480 (of 2876)
1...72  73  74  75  76  ...144
 
by eight children. William Dudley graduated from Harvard College in 1704 and made his first venture into public life in 1705, when he travelled with
to 1906 Duncan lived in Washington, Pa, and taught rhetoric and oratory at Washington and Jefferson College. In 1906 he moved to Lawrence, Kans., following his brother Robert Kennedy, who had joined
. William Smith Durie graduated from the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, England, in 1828. He was commissioned ensign in the 94th Foot on 20 Jan. 1832 and transferred to the 83rd Foot on 11
-Richelieu (Verchères County), L.C., son of Olivier-Amable Durocher and Geneviève Durocher; d. 6 Dec. 1876 at Quebec. After studying at the college
 
 1860. Douville, Hist. du collège-séminaire de Nicolet, 1: 299; 2: 160. Alcide Fleury, Arthabaska, capitale des Bois-Francs (Arthabaska, Qué., 1961), 12, 191, 224, 228. Albert Tessier
 
(Halifax), Registers for Windsor-Falmouth-Newport, 1774–95, 16 Aug. 1781 (mfm. at PANS). University of King’s College Library (Halifax), P. S. Hamilton, “History of the county of
 Roberts, who personally selected him as the first colonial officer to attend the Staff College at Camberley, England, in 1902. Three years later Eaton returned to Canada with the rank of major, and on 1
 
three-man board to license new practitioners. He must have prospered since he acquired more land. In 1833 he leased a ten-acre lot from King’s College and in 1837 he bought a farm in New Maryland
Arch. paroissiales, Saint-Pierre (Pubnico-Ouest, N.-É.), Reg. des baptêmes, mariages et sépultures, 10 sept. 1886. Centre acadien, Collège Sainte-Anne (Church Point, N.-É.), Paroisse Sainte-Marie
 
responsibility for such competitions was transferred to the college of agriculture at the University of Saskatchewan in 1910. Ewart and his wife retired from
 
Christians; their origins and history, 1815–1900 ([London], 1905). Albert Burnside, “The Bible Christians in Canada, 1832–1884” (thd thesis, Emmanuel College, Victoria Univ
). Léon-Adélard Fafard studied at the Collège de L’Assomption from 1864 to 1872. After a year’s noviciate with the Oblates at Lachine, which ended on 27 June 1873, he took his perpetual vows on 29
as a student at the Grammar School, and later at Marischal College, in Aberdeen, led to a brief teaching career in Montreal at Edward Black*’s
 
government, opened a school in the Jesuit college. Between 1766 and 1769 three more schools were opened at Quebec, one of them by James Jackson, who succeeded McClement in June 1768 as the official
quietly on his estate. A Presbyterian, he was a generous contributor to the Protestant schools of Montreal, to Queen’s College at Kingston, and to McGill University. Two sons, and a daughter, Louisa Goddard
. Francis Fulford came of old west country stock. He was educated at Blundells School and at Exeter College, Oxford (ba 1827, ma 1838, and
Collège Sainte-Marie, Montreal. In 1877, along with his brothers John and James, he started a dry-goods business styled J. J. and L. Furlong. He launched his own commission agency on 1 Jan
 
. Marie-Joseph-Eugène-Alphonse Gasté graduated from the lycée at Laval, France, in 1851 and entered the Grand Séminaire du Mans. He taught at the Collège de Château-Gonthier in 1854–55 and was
summer of 1842 for the commencement of work on Kingston’s cathedral; and the beginning of classes at Regiopolis College the same year. Gaulin also continued to make extensive pastoral visits throughout his
. Little is known about the childhood of Louis-Élie Geoffrion. He studied at the Collège Industriel de Varennes, and later may have attended a high school in New Haven, Conn. He is thought to have gone to
1461 to 1480 (of 2876)
1...72  73  74  75  76  ...144