1761 to 1780 (of 2876)
1...87  88  89  90  91  ...144
 
 Sept. 1711, at Quebec. At the end of his classical studies at the Jesuit college in his native town, he joined the Society of Jesus in Lyons on 7
daughters; d. 14 June 1908 at Holwood, near Hayes, Kent, England. Educated at Eton College, Frederick Arthur Stanley joined the
 
enrolled in the theological department of Trinity College at Hartford, Conn., to train as an Episcopalian minister. He completed his studies in 1852 and was ordained to the diaconate by the coadjutor bishop
 
Harvard College in Cambridge, Mass. So adept was he at acquiring “scientific knowledge” from “men of gigantic intellect,” as he explained his experience, that on graduation in 1866 he was awarded the law
. Tully’s luck seems to have turned when he won commissions in 1851 for Trinity College, on Queen Street in Toronto, and the Welland County Court-House at Merrittsville (Welland), and in 1852 for Cobourg’s
 
secondary schools and colleges. Four years later he remodelled the entire normal school building. White remained principal until his death in 1922 following prostate surgery. He had been ill and had lived in
missionary. During a stay of several weeks that summer on a reserve, he became “infatuated with the Indians” and determined that his work would be with them. For the next two years he studied at Huron College
entered Mount Allison’s college branch, where he received his ba in 1863, one of its first two graduates. He began a career in law, but gave it up because of the serious
attended Upper Canada College and the Model Grammar School, from which he graduated in 1860. He left the University of Toronto to find work in Upper Canada when his mother died and his father returned to
noviciate at Toulouse. He studied rhetoric (1641–42) and philosophy (1642–45) at the Collège in Billom, where he then became a teacher (1645–51); he studied theology at Toulouse (1651–55) and took his third
 
: 100, 105–6, 210, 214–17, 10831, 11834 (mfm. at PAC). Harvard College Library, Houghton Library, Harvard Univ. (Cambridge, Mass.), ms Can
 
fortune estimated variously at between one and a half and two million dollars. He disposed of it through numerous bequests. Among institutional beneficiaries were the Montreal Presbyterian College, the
 
works for the bettering of the country in which he lives,” James Angel was a long-time governor of the Methodist College in St John’s and chairman of the Methodist orphanage committee. His obituary
, and they had one son; d. there 15 Nov. 1931. Gustave Archambault did his classical studies at the Collège Sainte‑Marie in Montreal
the two men quarrelled violently over educational policy as Arthur proposed diverting funds from King’s College (University of Toronto) to Upper Canada College, and in 1840 Arthur privately rebuked
. The son of a clergyman in Macclesfield, England, Edward Westhead Arthy was matriculated at Queen’s College, University of Oxford, on 3 Nov. 1871 at age 18, but did not complete his studies
college of Saint-Hyacinthe, but had to leave the institution before the end of his classical studies. He then began to study law under the direction of Louis-Victor
Tracey*]. Stanley Clark Bagg began his studies under the direction of a Church of England minister and completed them at McGill College. He became a
 
. Jacob Bailey was born into a humble farming family but received a sound education through the interest of Jedediah Jewett, Congregational minister at Rowley, who prepared him for Harvard College. After
 
Collège Saint-Raphaël in Montreal, where he taught the fifth-year classes (Belles-Lettres) while continuing his theological studies. However, having had difficulties with the director, Jean-Baptiste
1761 to 1780 (of 2876)
1...87  88  89  90  91  ...144