Hamilton, Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal, Quebec City, and Saint John. The capacity of his London plant was then double what it had been in the 1870s, and his malting and brewing business ranked as probably the
the town of Ladner and donated the land for the Church of All Saints (Anglican).
His interest in municipal politics led William Ladner to concern
history of Prince Edward Island from its discovery in 1534 until the departure of Lieutenant-Governor Ready in A.D. 1831 (Saint John, N.B., 1923), 336–43
(Toronto), 46 (1933), no.23: 29. D. R. Jack, “The Yarmouth Herald,” Acadiensis (Saint John, N.B.), 8 (1908): 222–25. Kenneth Winter, “The town of Yarmouth: 1867 and 1923
Saint John (Charlottetown), 29 July 1791. G. H. Kielly, History of Montgomery settlers and others at Stanhope–Covehead–Brackley Pt., 1770–1970 (Stanhope, P.E.I., 1970
elsewhere on the personalities of the missionaries, their souls, their labours, their sufferings, and the deaths of those who became designated as Canadian martyr-saints. What Edmund Bailey
April 1786, in London, Le Maistre purchased for £650 a nine-room, two-storey, stone “mansion” at 12 Rue Sainte-Famille, Quebec, where he arrived in July. The following year he bought a farm
. Jean-Paul Legardeur de Saint-Pierre and Pierre d’Ailleboust d’Argenteuil
nature and duties of the military profession, delivered in Saint Andrew’s Church, Toronto, to the 93d Highlanders, on the eve of their departure from Toronto garrison (Toronto, 1840); A discourse
Société des Filles du cœur de Marie . . . (5v., Paris, 1899–1964). Guy Laperrière, Les congrégations religieuses: de la France au Québec, 1880–1914 (2v. parus, Sainte-Foy, Qué
Christ of Latter-day Saints, Geneal. Soc., International geneal. index. LAC, R2800-0-3. Man., Dept. of Tourism, Culture, Heritage, Sport and Consumer Protection, Vital statistics agency (Winnipeg), no.1911
born before 1900 who played a part in public life on the Miramichi: Northumberland County, New Brunswick, Canada (Saint John, 1997).
Jones]. In 1833 he received his first commission as a justice of the peace. During the 1830s he was a director of the Saint Lawrence Inland Marine Assurance Company and of the Brockville board
*’s capture of Oswego (Chouaguen) drove British seamen off Lake Ontario. All that Loring could manage was a reconnaissance on Lake George (Lac Saint-Sacrement) in September. He then asked for a sea
, Macarmick allowed a group of refugee Acadians from Saint-Pierre and Miquelon, where they had mainly worked in the fishery, to settle in the early 1790s at Isle Madame and Chéticamp. There they contributed to
Asia, Australia, and Europe before returning, shortly after his father’s death in 1853, to his family, then living in St Andrews (Saint-André-Est), Lower Canada. He remained there for about five
of Sainte-Foy on 28 April. Although critically wounded in the British defeat, Mackellar supervised the defence of Quebec during his convalescence until the arrival of a British squadron in May
. From its head office in Halifax, the firm eventually set up branches in Fredericton, Saint John, New Glasgow, N.S., and Montreal. Stocks and bonds were purchased on all the major exchanges, including the
. In 1905 it moved into a large building on Rue Saint-Denis, where it became better known to Montrealers. New faculty appointments were made and in 1907 Marceau travelled to Europe to recruit a few
Church of Saint Paul in Halifax, Nova Scotia: 1749–1949 (Toronto, 1949). G. O. Huestis, A manual of Methodism: being outlines of its history, doctrines, and discipline (Toronto
Arch. paroissiales, Sainte-Anne-de-Michillimakinac (Mackinac Island, Mich.), Financial record-book, 1828–38; Liber defunctorum missionis S. Anna, Mackinac, 1825–26; 1844–91: 89; Reg. des baptêmes
Robertson*, the principal of Macdonald College at Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Que.
Jamie Benidickson
for the ostensible purpose of resisting “the rise and progress of sentiment and opinions subversive to our happy Establishment in Church and State” and preventing an influx of refugees from Saint-Pierre
influences of autumn, a sermon in three parts, preached in Saint Andrew’s Church, Montreal . . . (Montreal, 1850); A sermon, occasioned by the death of
in Ireland and Scotland before migrating in 1885 with his wife to Canada. After serving as a Presbyterian minister first at Saint-Sylvestre and Leeds Village, Que., and then at Trois-Rivières, Maxwell
juill. 1792. Arch. de l’Hôpital Général de Québec, R.-C. Frobisher, “Chants, textes anglais ou français.” Arch. municipales, Bruxelles (Belgique), État civil, Sainte-Gudule, 24 juill. 1764. AUM
assistant to a surgeon in Caernarvon, Wales; in 1782 he joined the Royal Navy as an assistant surgeon. He served that year at the battle of the Saints, in the West Indies, and in 1784 was posted to Halifax
on 4 June the following year. After serving briefly in Norwich and Seaforth, he went to the diocese of Montreal, where he was rector in St Johns (Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu) (1875–82) and at
served through the battles of Saint-Eloi (Sint-Elooi), Sanctuary Wood, and Hooge, and through the bloody offensive along the Somme. On 18 Dec. 1916 he was made the general officer commanding the
,” Telegraph-Journal (Saint John, N.B.), 10 April 1930.
, James MacDonald to Hay. Royal Gazette and Miscellany of the Island of Saint John (Charlottetown), 28 Jan. 1792. J. M. Bumsted, “Captain John MacDonald and the Island
, 1895). J.-O. Plessis, “Journal de deux voyages apostoliques dans le golfe Saint-Laurent et les provinces d’en bas, en 1811 et 1812 . . . ,” Le Foyer canadien (Québec), 3
from its discovery in 1534 until the departure of Lieutenant-Governor Ready in A.D.1831 (Saint John, N.B., 1923), 259, 275, 348, 357, 390.
Johns (Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu). Later, in June 1807, he was commissioned to swear in the half-pay officers in the District of Montreal, and in June 1812 to administer the oath of allegiance
. . . (Saint John, N.B., 1843). The arrival of the first Scottish Catholic emigrants in Prince Edward Island and after, 1772–1922 (Summerside, P.E.I., 1922), 27, 37–40, 50–53, 110. James
1854 he put up the presbytery of St Patrick’s Church on Rue Saint-Stanislas from plans drawn by architect Goodlatte Richardson Browne. The construction of this stately edifice was tangible evidence
until 1808, when he toured his new domain by canoe. Journeying up the Rivière Saguenay, across Lac Saint-Jean, and along the Rivière Chamouchouane to Fort Ashuapmouchouan (on Lac Chigoubiche), he then
building on Rue Saint-Jacques. He was to head its bureau there as the person in charge of advertisements and subscriptions for the daily and weekly editions of the paper. Almost every day, the Mail
sequel to Campbell’s history (Boston, 1888). J. R. Campbell, A history of the county of Yarmouth, Nova Scotia (Saint John, N.B., 1876; repr. Belleville, Ont., 1972). Edwin
facts relative to the proceedings of the House of Assembly on Wednesday the third, and Thursday the fourth of March, 1802, at the close of the last session . . . ([Saint John, N.B.], 1802
in Scotland when on furlough in 1830–31. Upon his return he found himself relegated to the comparatively unimportant charge of the Saint-Maurice River district in Lower Canada, with headquarters at
John McPherson’s poetry was first published at various times during the period 1835–45 in a number of Maritime newspapers, including the Amaranth (Saint John, N.B.), the Yarmouth Herald and
farm near Crown Point (N.Y.). When the American revolution began, he suffered the loss of his land, house, and stock, and became a refugee in Fort St Johns (Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu) and Chambly
prices continued to rise. Moreover, the attraction of prosperity in Halifax and Saint John and the growing demand for sailors drew away miners, many of whom had been Newfoundland fishermen. Inflation and a
bought his discharge in order to pursue an acting career. For the next 15 years the growing family lived mainly in New York City, with John spending summers acting in Albany, Utica, Saint John, N.B
trip home in 1689 was marred by the accidental drowning of a man named Lacroix and two other men in a lake later called Lac Sainte-Croix.
In 1690
work is also represented in the collection of the New Brunswick Museum in Saint John. Curatorial research has led to exhibitions of the Ogden sisters’ painted china and an increased understanding of
French voyageurs in the Illinois country and in the neighbourhood of Fort Saint-Louis.
M. de
, resisted the moral pressure of the missionary; Jacobs deplored the “diabolical doings of this Fort.” Deprived of the wise guidance of Evans, his “Saint Paul,” Jacobs read the Anglican service and John
, P, 46, no.49; RG 32, 157, 9 June 1847. Acadian Recorder, 2 Aug. 1895. Maritime Baptist (Saint John, N.B.), 22 Feb. 1928. C. D. Howell, “Elite