1601 to 1620 (of 2876)
1...79  80  81  82  83  ...144
 
as a merchant a few years after the period 1775–82, which he had spent at the Collège Saint-Raphaël in Montreal. Like most rural ridings, Leinster had two members, and another merchant from
 
. Charles-Marie Panneton received his schooling at the Collège de Joliette, where his family had moved when he was a child. Showing musical talent, he was sent back to Montreal for private lessons with one of
Grammar School under Francis H. Wright, ma, of Trinity College, Dublin. In 1842, at which time his father, a reformer, was provincial surveyor general, Parke managed to
children of New Brunswick’s small loyalist upper class in the early 19th century. He attended the Saint John Grammar School, King’s Collegiate School at Windsor, N.S., in 1811, and then King’s College
 
younger (who refers to him in the “Discourse of western planting” as “my bedfelowe in Oxforde”), and became friendly with the Puritan president of Magdalen College, Dr. Laurence Humfrey
and Alice Curtain; d. at Cold Springs, Ont., on 22 Feb. 1872. Charles Pedley, whose father was an engraver, entered Rotherham College in
 
. Educated at the Royal Military College in Sandhurst, England, Adam John Laing Peebles was commissioned an ensign in the 59th Foot on 12 April 1831, and was subsequently stationed in the
 
(Montréal, 1877), 13–15. Maurault, Le collège de Montréal (Dansereau; 1967). Maréchal Nantel, “Les avocats admis au Barreau de 1849 à 1868,” BRH, 42 (1936): 686. Romain Pelletier
School of Art (now the Ontario College of Art), Toronto, from 1876 to 1882, Perré instructed the school’s early students, including George Agnew
 
Jesuit college. Certain people, including François-Marie Perrot*, maintained that Abbé
) (1896 and 1897), and the École Saint-Joseph in Montreal (1897–1903). His superiors assigned him in 1903 to the Collège du Mont-Saint-Louis in Montreal, a bilingual boarding and day school, which was
, Canada East. After completing his secondary education at the Séminaire de Québec, Thomas-Ferruce Picard Destroismaisons was sent to the Collège de
, he emphasized, had the finest church in the diocese, a sufficient number of clergy (attached to Assumption College) to provide the religious services worthy of a bishopric, and the largest
 
Archives du collège de Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière (La Pocatière, Qué.), CAC 1038, nos.726.3, 726.5. Allaire, Dictionnaire, I, 442. Caron, “Inv. de la corr. de Mgr Briand,” ANQ Rapport
Quebec. François-Louis de Pourroy de Lauberivière studied at the Jesuit college in Grenoble and at the Sulpician seminary in Paris; he was ordained a
 
-Sébastien Pressart studied at the diocesan college in Quimper and received the tonsure there; on 23 Dec. 1747, minor orders and the priesthood were conferred upon him in Paris. He arrived in Canada
the Jesuits at the Collège Sainte-Marie in Montreal, and then studied law at the branch of the Université Laval there, obtaining an llb in 1894. He was called to the
Université Laval. By September the three men were in Rome, where Pâquet was enrolled at the Roman College (Pontifical Gregorian University), studying moral theology. He was particularly influenced by Girolamo
the Hôtel-Dieu de Saint-Vallier at Chicoutimi, run by the Religieuses Hospitalières de la Miséricorde de Jésus (Augustinian Nuns), and a domestic training college at Roberval, for which the Ursulines of
 
subdean and prebendary of St Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin. Young Thomas Radcliff was educated at Trinity College. He was not, however, attracted to the church, as several of his brothers were, but to
1601 to 1620 (of 2876)
1...79  80  81  82  83  ...144