Aug. 1844 at Saint-Jacques-de-l’Achigan (Saint-Jacques, Montcalm County), L.C., son of Joseph Dupuis, a farmer, and Euphrasie Richard, of Acadian ancestry; d. 24 Aug. 1876 at Montreal, Que
trader, and Marie Poulin; d. 3 Feb. 1859 in Saint-Michel, Lower Canada.
Narcisse-Charles Fortier received his classical education at the
and Marie-Anne Barbeau; d. 2 May 1875 at Saint-Flavien, Quebec.
Ferdinand-Edmond Gauvreau studied theology at the seminary of Nicolet
PARADIS, ROLAND, silversmith; b. c. 1696, son of Claude Paradis and Geneviève Cussy of the parish of Saint
PUISEAUX, PIERRE DE, seigneur of Montrénault in France, of Saint-Michel and of Sainte-Foy in New France; b. c. 1566
SAINT-AUBIN, AMBROISE (Ambroise, Ambroise Bear, Ambroise Pier, Ambroise
SUÈVE, EDMOND DE, lieutenant in the Régiment de Carignan and co-seigneur of Sainte-Anne de la Perade; b. some time between 1617 and 1620
BABINEAU, FRANÇOIS-XAVIER, priest and teacher; b. 21 March 1825 at Saint-Louis-de-Kent, N.B., son of Joseph
Bayard* and Frances Catherine Robertson; m. 11 July 1843 Susan Maria Wilson of Chamcook, N.B.; they had no children; d. 17 Dec. 1907 in Saint John, N.B
Marischal College. In 1798 he immigrated to Saint John, N.B., to join his brother John*, who had already established a prosperous shipping and
BOURDON, MARGUERITE, dite de Saint-Jean-Baptiste, Augustinian Hospitaller of the Hôtel-Dieu of Quebec, one
BUNTING, WILLIAM FRANKLIN, civil servant, magistrate, author, and sportsman; b. 25 May 1825 in Saint John, N.B., son of the
1795 at Saint-Vincent-de-Paul (Laval, Que.), son of Vincent Chartrand and Marie-Charlotte Labelle; d. unmarried 26 March 1863 in his native parish
parish of Saint-Nizier, Lyons, France, son of Henri Degeay and Marie Bournicat; d. 6 Aug. 1774 in Montreal (Que.).
In February 1740
L’Avenir, the official organ of the Rouges, mentions his name in its list of representatives for this region. On 24 Feb. 1853, Guitté and A. de Grandpré founded Le Courrier de Saint
HEGAN, ELIZA PARKS, nurse; b. 1861 likely in Portland (Saint John), N.B., daughter of John Hegan and Eliza Black; d. there 18 Feb
Saint John. She was undaunted by the “indifference and hostility” that met suffragists, and her contribution was honoured after her death
LANGLOIS, MARIE-THÉRÈSE, dite de Saint-Jean-Baptiste
Tirepied, France, son of Jacques Courtois and Marguerite Le Ménager; d. 18 May 1828 in Saint-Laurent, Île d’Orléans, Lower Canada
LE SUEUR, JEAN, also called Abbé Saint-Sauveur, priest, chaplain of the Hôtel-Dieu
LEAVITT, THOMAS, businessman; b. c. 1795 in Saint John, N.B., son of Jonathan Leavitt and Hephzibah Peabody
.
Abbé Mailloux began his pastoral life as chaplain (1825–29), then first parish priest (1829–33), of Saint-Roch de Québec. After some months officiating at Fraserville (Rivière-du-Loup), he was required
, and they had 12 children; d. 21 Aug. 1838 in Saint John, N.B.
Thomas Millidge was seven years old when he arrived
of John Mott; d. 7 Jan. 1814 in Saint John, N.B.
Jacob S. Mott was a member of the printing fraternity both by family and by
PARKER, ROBERT, lawyer, politician, and judge; b. 26 June 1796 in Saint John, N.B., eldest son of Robert Parker and Jane
(Baieville, Yamaska County), L.C., son of Louis Proulx and Élisabeth Grondin; d. 6 July 1871 at Sainte-Marie (Beauce County), Que
SAINT-PÈRE, JEAN DE, clerk of court, notary, and syndic; b
. 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
; d. 15 Jan. 1859 in Baie-du-Febvre (Baieville), Lower Canada.
The son of a tanner of the faubourg Saint-Roch at Quebec
François-Pierre Cherrier*, a notary and merchant, and Marie Dubuc; d. 18 Sept. 1809 in Saint-Denis, on the Rivière
-Rivières; d. 27 July 1884 at Saint-Norbert-d’Arthabaska (Norbertville), Que.
Philippe-Napoléon Pacaud studied at the Séminaire de
1857 with the Marianite Sisters of Holy Cross in Saint-Laurent, near Montreal. She was later sent to the United States and returned in 1874, called to the College of St Joseph in Memramcook, N.B., as an
A pioneer of women’s rights, Idola Saint-Jean (1879–1945) founded in 1927 the Canadian Alliance for the Women’s Vote in Quebec
TROTTIER, MARGUERITE, dite Saint-Joseph, sister of the Congregation of Notre-Dame, superior of the community
ALLARD DE SAINTE-MARIE, JEAN-JOSEPH D’, officer in the colonial regular troops; b. c. 1670 in Provence; m
DORION, EUGÈNE-PHILIPPE, lawyer, translator, and man of letters; b. 6 Aug. 1830 at Saint-Ours, of the
Dandurand, in Laprairie (La Prairie), Lower Canada, and they had one son; d. 17 Sept. 1854 in Saint-Jean (Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu), Lower Canada
; d. 1649 in the Huron country.
He was baptized on 25 (or 26) May in the parish of Saint-Gervais, and was the second son of Jean Garnier, an
GORMAN, CHARLES INGRAHAM, athlete, soldier, railway brakeman, and businessman; b. 6 July 1897 in Saint John, son of William
, Galan, and Galand also appear), settler in Acadia and Île Saint-Jean (Prince Edward Island), founder of the Haché and the Gallant families of the Maritimes; b. c. 1663
. 14 March 1808 at the mission of Lac-des-Deux-Montagnes (which became the parish of Oka in 1910), L.C., son of Antoine-Hyasinthe Lemaire Saint-Germain and Marie-Josephte Félix; d. 17 Dec
) MacDonell, a Scottish artillery lieutenant, and Marie-Anne Picoté de Bélestre; d. 1866 at Saint-Anicet, Canada East.
In 1812, the year his
, seigneur of the fief of Saint-Maurice, and Marie Jutra; m. on 19 Nov. 1717 Madeleine-Louise Le Boulanger at Cap-de-la-Madeleine; d. sometime after 1744
, royal attorney, court officer; b. 1649 in the little town of Sénillé, near Châtellerault (Vienne), son of Michel Roy and Louise Chevalier; buried 14 Jan. 1709 at Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pérade
SAINT-CLAIR, PIERRE DE, naval officer, a native of Normandy (probably of Avranches
. 29 June 1901 in Saint John, N.B.
James Bennet’s place of birth was one of the earliest centres of the Presbyterian secession in Ireland. As
well established as a silversmith in Montreal by 1783, since in that year he rented a stone house on Rue Saint-Jacques from silversmith Dominique
Saint John), N.B.
James Stanley Harris received little formal education and at age 15 apprenticed as a blacksmith. In 1823 he moved to Saint
JARVIS, WILLIAM MUNSON, barrister, insurance agent, and author; b. 9 Oct. 1838 in Saint John, son of William Jarvis and Mary
LAGORCE, CHARLES-IRÉNÉE, priest, Cleric of St Viator; b. 6 June 1813 at Saint-Hyacinthe, Lower Canada