. c. 1777, probably in Halifax, son of Richard John Uniacke* and Martha Maria Delesdernier; m. 23 Nov. 1829
own involvement with a charge of murder, and after a short illness he died the next year at the age of 44.
B. C
. F. Uniacke; no.2201, will of E. G. Uniacke (mfm. at PANS). PANS, MG 1; 926B (Richard John Uniacke Sr papers), R. J. Uniacke’s will; RG 5, P, 69–74, education. USPG, C/CAN/NS 8
AJQ, Registre d’état civil, Notre-Dame de Québec, 25 nov. 1720. AN, Col., B, 58, f.423; 63, f.472; C11A, 62, f.265; 74, pp.168–76; 75, pp.362–66, 367; 82, pp.15–20 (PAC transcripts
and Warren papers. F. H. Baddeley, “An essay on the localities of metallic minerals in the Canadas, with some notices of their geological associations and situation, &c.,” Literary and
VAVASOUR, HENRY WILLIAM, army officer and military engineer; b. c. 1783 in County Dublin (Republic of Ireland), son
lieutenant governor, 1876–79 (mfm. at Glenbow-Alberta Institute). Supreme Court of Alberta (Edmonton), Probate Section, Papers relating to the estate of George Verey, 1890–94. J. [C.] McDougall
VINCENT, THOMAS, fur trader; b. c. 1776; d. 30 March 1832 in England
Seminary, at Albion, Michigan (Ann Arbor), 1855–60. E. W. Dadson, “Mrs. J. C. Yule,” McMaster Univ. Monthly (Toronto), 4 (1894–95): 97–105 [accompanied
. al.) vol.6. E. C. Guillet, The lives and times of the Patriots: an account of the rebellion in Upper Canada, 1837–1838, and the Patriot agitation in the
WALES, WILLIAM, mathematician and astronomer; b. c. 1734 of
AO, MS 35; MU 3054, “Data on United Empire Loyalists . . . ,” comp. W. D. Reid (typescript, c. 1930); RG 22, ser.155; ser.159, 1801–58, R–Z, no.50. CTA, RG 1, B (mfm
, c.55; 1860, c.135. Le Courrier de Saint-Hyacinthe, 23 déc. 1890. La Minerve, 4 avril 1873; 13, 20, 23 déc. 1890. Le Pionnier de
WEDDERBURN, ALEXANDER, businessman, office holder, and author; b. c
WELLS, DAVID, conscientious objector; b. c. 1897 in England; d. 18
John (Prince Edward Island); b. c. 1694, apparently the son of Captain Arthur Whitmore of York, whose will refers to a son Edward; d. 1761
. in 1842 M. C. Jackson of London, Canada West, and they had three sons and a daughter; d. 25 Nov. 1890 in Hamilton, Ont.
James Miller
third machine was installed in 1894, making the enterprise one of the largest of its kind in Canada. Around 1896 J. C. Wilson and Company controlled all the hydraulic power on the Rivière du Nord in
an independent. He was successful, but in the 1851 election T. C. Dixon, whom he had defeated in 1849, bested him.
Re-elected in 1854 as
. Wingfield; Scrapbooks, R. Butler, “Saturday musings”; J. Tinsley, “Old Hamiltonians.” Hamilton Spectator, 10 Aug. 1896. DHB. C. C. James, A