701 to 720 (of 2374)
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SANBORN, JOHN SEWELL, teacher, politician, and judge; b. 1 Jan. 1819 at Gilmanton, N.H., ninth and youngest child of
 
Trinity and who became a justice of the peace. Street’s brother-in-law James Rowe became a shipbuilder for his firm and in 1801 was living at Heart’s Content on a fishing room owned by Street. As one of the
constitutional law; b. 24 Oct. 1836 in Sydney, N.S., son of John Bourinot* and Margaret Jane Marshall; m. first 1 Sept. 1858, in
 
, Alexander Wood* of York (Toronto), wanted to retain the property but Forsyth was anxious to sell it to James Robins, his future father-in-law, for
the educational committee, 31 Dec. 1921. McCord Stewart Museum (Montreal), P125 (Women’s Art Society of Montreal fonds), A2, 1, “The story of the Montreal Women’s Art Society told by Miss Mary
(Ottawa), Robinson papers (mfm. at AO). William Blackstone, Commentaries on the laws of England (4v., Oxford, 1765–69; repr. Chicago and London, 1979), 1: 357–61; 4: 74–93. U.C., House of Assembly
appointed lieutenant-colonel of the Durham militia, a group he considered “a lawless . . . damned set of villains”; he also became a justice of the peace on 1 Feb. 1800. William was concerned
(1992): 1–28; “‘The ten thousand pound job’: political corruption, equitable jurisdiction, and the public interest in Canada, 1852–6,” Essays in Canadian law (Flaherty et al.), 2: 143–99
Marie-Louise Globensky; m. 11 Jan. 1887 Henri Gérin-Lajoie in the parish of Saint-Jacques, Montreal, and they had four children; d. 1 Nov. 1945 in Montreal
 22, ser.155; ser.159, Nicholas Hagerman, Daniel Hagerman. Law Soc. of U.C. (Toronto), Minutes. MTRL, William Allan papers. PAC, MG 24, A40; RG 1, E3; L3; RG 5
 
Davie* and Elizabeth Johnson Taylor; m. 3 Sept. 1860 Mary Euphemia Patton in Lévis, Lower Canada, and they had two daughters and four sons; d. 1 Sept. 1907 in Lévis
rather than familiarity with the Criminal Code or city by-laws. Since they were concerned more with serious crime and routine duties than with periodic bursts of public virtue, few arrests for prostitution
1 Dec. 1859 in Toronto. Son of a hospitable but poverty-ridden family, John Sheridan Hogan came to York (Toronto) to live with an
and all other adjacent Islands the Islands of Madelaine excepted.” He was sworn in at St John’s on 1 June. Keats would govern as a summer
 
his mother-in-law’s estate that was immediately available to her Schoultz paid some of his debts and purchased a mill. However, he was without a continuing livelihood, and in addition to a wife, in-laws
to have given up for health reasons; he then went into law. He was called to the bar in January 1866 after articling in the office of Moreau, Ouimet, et Chapleau in Montreal. According to his
(Taylor, Lady Taylor), teacher and social reformer; b. 1
), and they had at least 12 children; d. 1 Dec. 1835 in Charlottetown. Although Aretas William Young’s origins are obscure, he must have
 Jan. 1854 in Montreal Julia Nelson (d. 1870), daughter of Wolfred Nelson*, and they had five children; m. secondly 1 June 1875
(Powlett), Lord St John of Basing (afterwards Marquis of Winchester), thereby gaining the patronage of that courtier and of his son-in-law, John Egerton, Earl of Bridgewater
701 to 720 (of 2374)
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