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Buade de Frontenac decided to reply to the attacks directed against New France by the Iroquois and encouraged by the English. He raised three expeditionary corps, one of which was recruited at
 
effects of the cholera epidemic. His name was put forward in 1834 as the Frontenac County candidate for election to the legislature, and he was widely supported throughout the campaign that summer as a
 
to Governor Buade* de Frontenac, in which he praised his Indians and drew the governor’s attention to the efforts
 
country squire, Richardson once again took up command of a vessel. On 9 May 1818, less than a year after the Frontenac (the first Canadian-built steamboat on the Great Lakes) began
the governors and intendants of the colony. Buade* de Frontenac and Duchesneau favoured Riverin. Their successors
 
. Buade* de Frontenac wrote to the minister in 1690 that, subject to royal confirmation, he had named “Sieur Robineau Becancour the older son to replace Sr. [René] Robineau de Portneuf the
 
 Poterie, on 7 July 1671. Governor Buade de Frontenac, on 23 March 1677, also
 
arranged. In an angry letter to Abercromby in June 1758, Vaudreuil recalled Schuyler, who returned in August authorized to negotiate prisoner exchanges. With the fall of Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont
Frontenac and the Baril School for the Hochelaga school board, and between then and 1914, he would land five of the six contracts let by that board. In 1912 the boards of two towns, Saint-Laurent and Saint
 
poor that Governor Buade de Frontenac had to obtain for him a pension of 150
 
Frontenac, in order to “make up the number of judges required to judge the charges of impugnment brought by” François-Marie
 
and the following year was sent by Governor Frontenac [Buade*] to command among the Miami, the Indigenous people who
 
isolated experience. On 25 June 1752 he was at Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.) to make astronomical observations. Meanwhile Bonnécamps had become
 
minister of Marine to go to France on private business, and in 1734 he was appointed to Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.). The following year he was sent to Fort Niagara (near Youngstown, N.Y.), and in 1736
 
[Brisay*] and Frontenac [Buade*] during the Iroquois wars. In 1692, at Pointe-Lévy (Lauzon, Que.), he married
 
-Nouvelle-Beauce (Sainte-Marie, Que.) and Saint-Joseph-de-la-Nouvelle-Beauce (Saint-Joseph, Que.); then from 1753 to 1754 he acted as chaplain at Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.). For some years afterward
 
Buade de Frontenac on 26 Oct. 1678 to give an opinion on trafficking in spirits. He expressed himself in favour of bartering with intoxicating liquors, as did the majority of the
 
, Couillard de Lespinay received from Buade* de Frontenac a commission as captain of the port of Quebec. Curiously enough
 
Correctional Staff College (Kingston, Ont.), Canadian Penitentiary Service Museum, Warden John Creighton’s journal, 1870–74 (mfm. at QUA). PAC, RG 31, A1, 1861 census, Frontenac County. QUA, Corporation of
 
Hôtel-Dieu in Quebec and superior; b. 27 Jan. 1716 in Montreal (Que.), daughter of Martin Curot, a storekeeper at Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.), and Madeleine Cauchois; d. 18 Jan
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