DCB/DBC Mobile beta
+

Results per Page: Go
Modify search on Advanced Search page

Type of Result

      Region of Birth

          Region of Activities

              Occupations and Other Identifiers

                  181 to 200 (of 395)
                  1...8  9  10  11  12  ...20
                   
                  frenchify her. More than once this missionary point of view aroused Governor Buade* de Frontenac’s anger
                   
                  Lechasseur* (secretary of Buade de Frontenac), which is not, of course, necessarily an indication that the abbé was then in France. Tanguay, Allaire, and Sulte, after Noiseux – whose information is
                   
                  Buade de Frontenac openly favoured. The absolute necessity of having a representative in France to serve the interests of the seminary and the
                   
                  the opinions of an assembly of notables regarding the sale of spirits to the Indians. He enjoyed the confidence of Frontenac
                   
                  in which he attacked Buade de Frontenac. When the witnesses were interrogated
                   
                  Buade de Frontenac and the Conseil Souverain took sides against the vicars general and the seminary, in February–March 1675. He was
                  pilgrims. On 4 March 1677 Buade* de Frontenac granted him
                   
                  . 7 Nov. 1729 at Quebec. Martel came to Canada in 1672 as a soldier in the personal guard of Governor Frontenac
                   
                  one another. Frontenac [Buade*] told the Miamis in 1697 that Michipichy and another Huron chief, Le Baron, had
                   
                  . . . , suivi des relations officielles de Frontenac, Monseignat et Juchereau de Saint-Ignace . . . (Montréal, 1898), Archange Godbout, “Paradis,” SGCF Mémoires, I (1944), 30–33. Ernest
                  . It was undoubtedly Price’s next hotel, the Château Frontenac, that brought the Château style into fashion. William Cornelius Van
                   
                  . In October 1696 Frontenac [Buade*] granted him a piece of land in Acadia, but he did not farm it. It was as the
                   
                  Buade* de Frontenac’s expedition during the summer of 1696 against the same enemies. He earned a citation as a “good officer.” In 1702 he became captain of a company of colonial regular troops
                   
                  Buade de Frontenac and Abbé Fénelon [see Salignac
                   
                  , Agonstot, interceded, however, and persuaded the other Iroquois to set Tonty free. In July 1684 Tekanoet was taken hostage at Fort Frontenac by
                   
                  apparently prevented Thompson from farming extensively; from 1815 until 1855 he taught at common schools in and around the town of Niagara, and for a brief time in Frontenac County. In 1842 and 1843 he may
                   
                  ) (Québec, 1897), 31–48, 139–143 (extract from Thury’s account of the destruction of Pemaquid, from Charlevoix). Parkman, Count Frontenac and New France
                   
                  . Like his father before him, Calvin was reeve and magistrate on Garden Island; he also served on the Frontenac County Council for 12
                   
                  Youngstown, N.Y.) and Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.). The king reserved their trade for his own account, and the profits had declined so rapidly that the minister suspected abuses by Pierre Pépin, dit
                  Frontenac, from Henry Gildersleeve* for about £1,500 in January 1825 to add to a new but smaller steamer which they had built, the
                  181 to 200 (of 395)
                  1...8  9  10  11  12  ...20