901 to 920 (of 1125)
1...44  45  46  47  48  ...57
. Univ. of Toronto Arch., A70-0005, 1850–58; A72-0024/001–2, King’s College council minutes, 1829–43; A73-0015/001, 1829–33. Can., Prov. of, Legislative Council, Journals, 1843–58. Catalogue
, 1919), 174–75. L. C. Clark, “The Conservative party in the 1890’s,” CHA Report, 1961: 58–74. Ramsay Cook, “Tillers and toilers: the rise and fall of populism in Canada in the 1890s,” CHA
perspective,” Vie des arts no.58 (printemps 1970): 25; “Primitive with character: a Quebec school of the early nineteenth century,” Art Quarterly (Detroit), 20 (1957): 21–29. M.-D
 
 11, [CO 42], Q, 2, pp.81–88, 233–35; 6, pp.34–35, 127; 7, pp.192, 253, 266; 8, pp.18, 43–45, 47, 53–56, 74–76, 79–83, 97–98, 160–64, 168, 217–19, 221; 9, pp.34, 51–52, 91–95, 157–58; 10, pp.8, 22, 44
(2015–16), no.1: 125–58; Histoire du syndicalisme au Québec: des origines à nos jours (Montréal, 1989). Robert Rumilly, Histoire de la province de Québec (41v., Montréal et Paris, 1940
the bishop was insufficient to prevent Pope’s defeat; Angus MacMillan, a political novice, received 58 per cent of the Roman Catholic and 59 per cent of the Protestant vote
 
, 111; 1815: 10–11, 15–16, 18, 22, 24, 28, 31, 36–37, 55, 58, 74, 77, 104, 107–9, 118; 1816: 6, 9, 13–15, 19, 29–30, 40; 1817: 8, 16, 27–29, 158; 1818: 12, 20, 58, 66, 136; 1819: 18, 59, 130–31; 1820: 14
 
58, Corr. générale, J.-B.-A. Adhémar à François Baby, 23 juill., 1er, oct., 5 nov. 1770, 25 août 1771, 21 nov. 1776, 10 sept., 6 oct
affiliation. David G. Burley AO, F 58
 
century, is at the National Maritime Museum (JOD/66, ms 58/055, Thomas Ainslie journal). The Remembrancer; or, Impartial Repository of Public Events (London), 6 (1778
Assembly, Journal, 1846; Reports of the debates, 1857–58, 1865; Supreme Court, New Brunswick equity cases (Toronto), 1 (1876–93); New Brunswick Reports, 12–16 (1867–77
; mss, 12, ff.41, 43, 45; 13, 12 août 1774, 10 août 1800; 433; mss-m, 228; Polygraphie, VII, 134; XVIII, 65; XIX, 64b; Séminaire, 16, no.23. AUM, P 58, Corr
Ian Ross Robertson PANL, GN 1/3A, 1856–62; GN 1/3B, 1855–58; GN 9/1, 1861–69. PRO, CO 194/150–65; CO 226/79–83, especially 226
, Québec, État civil, Catholiques, L’Ange-Gardien, 22 août 1898. ANQ-MBF, CE1-48, 1er oct. 1835; P-3. ANQ-Q, CE3-15, 22 juill. 1874; P1000-58-1125. CRCCF, P 32/I/A: 61; Ph 32
 
during this period of his life, in 1656 or 1657, that he came under the influence of Elizabeth Harris, the Quaker missionary, and it was on 14 Jan. 1657/58 (or the 14th day of the 11th month
. (Wilson). Toronto directory, 1833–90. J. M. S. Careless, Brown of “The Globe” (2v., Toronto, 1959–63; repr. 1972), 1: 176; 2: 28, 55–58, 292–99. Creighton, Macdonald
at 58 St Mary Street while working on a cartoon supporting an anti-smoking campaign. He had never deserted the good old cause of moral reform
. James K. Hiller PANL, GN 1/3A, 1850–74; GN 1/3B, 1855–58, 1868–74; GN 2/1, 32–69; GN 3/2, 1831–80. PRO, CO 194/68, 194/144
Association (2v., Toronto, 1935–58), 1. Desmond Morton and Terry Copp, Working people: an illustrated history of the Canadian labour movement (Ottawa, 1980). G. W. L. Nicholson
 
ordered by his queen to recapture Méry-sur-Seine in Champagne. Pierced by many bullets, he died in December 1615 at the age of 58. Various historians have given different versions of his death but the
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