surrenders . . . [1680–1906] (3v., Ottawa, 1891–1912; repr. Toronto, 1971), 1: 1–3, 30–31. Indian affairs: laws and treaties, comp. C. J. Kappler ([2nd ed.], 2v., Washington
Francklin, granddaughter of Michael Francklin*; d. 1 June 1870 at Halifax without offspring
News on 15 Nov. 1841, and on 1 Jan. 1842 he announced in the Halifax Times that he was “prepared to execute Daguerreotype likenesses in a beautiful style” with the aid of a “first
along the St Clair River. Educated by a tutor and at a school in Weston (Toronto), Vidal began to study law in 1860 and the same year was commissioned in the 3rd Battalion of Lambton militia. Three
.
In 1690 Claude-Sébastien was sent as a lieutenant to Acadia, where, on 1 March 1693, he received command of a company. In May 1694 he went to put an end to the negotiations between the
McDougall. Being a noble, ˀKwah inherited the right to certain beaver lands. Assisted by his sons and sons-in-law he was, like his fellow nobles, a chief supplier of beaver and other furs to Fort St
McInnes]. Once back in the capital, he renewed his ties with Dalhousie, where he served on the board of governors from 1887 to 1893 and taught a course on marine insurance at the law
improvements. She was supported in her claim by two other immigrants from Somerset, John Rowswell, a neighbouring settler, and Benjamin Tett, her future brother-in-law. After much dispute, a compromise was
* to investigate a complaint that, contrary to law, a Roman Catholic priest had celebrated a public mass in Conception Bay. Garland’s preliminary inquiry determined that a priest had held mass at Caplin
.
Good family connections are implied by Antoine Le Poupet de La Boularderie’s early position as a page to the Duc d’Orléans and his entry on 1 Jan. 1724 into the Régiment de Richelieu, in
. 1800, Pilkington broke the news to White’s brother-in-law and patron, Samuel Shepherd, the English jurist. His offer to assume responsibility for White’s two sons was not accepted as they returned to
John Hine of Dartmouth, a brother-in-law and long agent and captain with the company, while John Hatt Noble formed one with Henry Hunt of Dartmouth. Noble and Hunt moved from the west of England to
, according to his teachers.
When he left the seminary in 1822 Morin hesitated between law and the priesthood but finally chose law. In debt and without
Oct. 1909 (copy at Law Soc. of Upper Canada Arch., Toronto). Law Soc. of Upper Canada Arch., 1-5 (Convocation, rolls), common roll, Michaelmas term, 1856; barristers’ roll, Hilary term, 1860; 1-5.6
Halifax, where a brother-in-law, James Brenton*, was an assistant judge on the Supreme Court, he became head of the Royal Navy’s medical department
provincial politics: he was the nephew of Conservative Charles-Borromée Genest, brother-in-law of the Conservative Nérée Le Noblet Duplessis and of Liberals Richard-Stanislas Cooke and William-Pierre
. The partnership lasted until 1792. On 1 May of that year Badgley left with the annual spring brigade for the voyage to Grand Portage (near Grand Portage, Minn.). He had been hired to do a survey
.
In 1844 Badgley and his colleague William Sutherland started the first medical journal in Montreal published in English, the Montreal Medical Gazette. It was replaced on 1 April 1845
so ignorant of the law that he had been obliged to restrict them to “their proper duties of Conservators of the Peace” by establishing a Supreme Court of Civil Justice, under his brother-in-law, David
Alexander Croke*.
Brenton’s career in law seems to have been one of continuous conflict. As a