1641 to 1660 (of 2876)
1...81  82  83  84  85  ...144
 
Edinburgh. On 24 May 1841 he became a member of the Royal College of Surgeons, London. Shortly thereafter he immigrated to Canada, and in 1844 married the daughter of John
Great Britain and the United States. His children, after home tutoring, were sent to King’s College in Windsor or to English schools. Three of Seaman’s children – one a lawyer and secretary to
government and the Methodist Missionary Society. Along with his mother and sister, he had left England in 1860 to join his father at Bruce Mines, Upper Canada. He enrolled in Victoria College, Cobourg, in 1868
communicated with specialists in Ottawa and at the Iowa Agricultural College but was critical of the fruit-growing methods they advocated. His cultural practices were a testament to his acumen for he discovered
to become Livingston’s first assistant. Between 1904 and 1906 she attended Teachers’ College at Columbia University, studying teaching in schools of nursing. After other nursing-related work in New
 
Regiment in Canada from 1825 to 1835. Little is known about Jonathan’s early life, but he was for some time a gentleman cadet at the Royal Military College at Sandhurst, England. He was in Montreal in 1829
 
, Smith, to open 24 miles of “King’s highway” north from Sherbrooke across Stoke Township. In 1841 Smith was one of the subscribers towards the erection of Bishop’s College at Lennoxville, and in 1845 he
grandfather had been a merchant in England before immigrating to New York City in 1715. His father graduated from Yale College in 1722, became a successful lawyer, and in 1753 was appointed a member of the
 
example and imitation as apprentices rather than as students at the royal college of surgery at Saint-Côme. Soupiran is known to have transmitted his
 
. Alexander Spark received his primary education at the grammar school in Montrose, Scotland; he later entered King’s College (University of Aberdeen). After his graduation with an ma
Lambeth dd by Archbishop Charles Manners-Sutton and a dcl by King’s College, Windsor, N.S. Bishop Inglis offered him the archdeaconry of
segment of that family business into Newfoundland’s largest glass and china emporium. Owen grew up “over the shop,” and after graduating from Bishop Feild College joined the family enterprise. A
official crest above the main door of University College during its construction (1856–59), for example, and was responsible for executing the inscriptions on monuments supplied by his firm, most of which he
Wales College, headed by Alexander Anderson*, in Charlottetown, where he earned a second
Institute (1879) and the Royal Military College of Canada in Kingston (1883), which emphasized engineering as well as military training. He initially worked in eastern Ontario as a survey engineer for the
equalled in any colony of England.” A member of the Church of England, he served as trustee of the University of Trinity College in Toronto. He was a lieutenant-colonel in the Welland militia and a justice
 
. According to oral tradition, his true name was Arthur McDonald and by the early 1870s, after graduating from some college in the United States or Canada, he was living near Hamilton, Ont. Around this time he
to their college. Thus in 1868, one Julius Tardeville (his Americanized name) reached the shores of the Rivière Yamaska. Because of his age and enthusiasm for his work, he was allowed to do the
 
. 1824 in Eksel, Belgium; d. 9 Oct. 1897 in Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré, Que. Jean Tielen studied at the Collège de Beringen in Belgium, and
1641 to 1660 (of 2876)
1...81  82  83  84  85  ...144