221 to 240 (of 395)
1...10  11  12  13  14  ...20
 
. 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
 
. Buade* de Frontenac requested a lieutenant’s commission for him, and this was granted him on 3 April 1696. He then commanded small ships fitted out for fighting privateers and for protecting
 
Buade* de Frontenac sent him, with 50 Canadians and 60 Indians, to attack the English post at Casco (Falmouth). He was joined by
 
. In August 1674, Frontenac [Buade*] had the Sulpician François de
supposed that it was she, because the archives mention her name in close association with the discoverer’s, and because she was the only spinster of her rank to live at Fort Frontenac
 
general. The latter, a victim of the ill-will of Frontenac [Buade*], whose hostility was unrelenting, had been ill for
 
e partie, lettres à M. Tronson. Jug. et délib., I, 862, 866, 867. Eccles, Frontenac, 68f. Henri Gauthier, La Compagnie de Saint-Sulpice au Canada
 
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
 
detachment in Louis Buade* de Frontenac’s expedition to Lake Ontario in 1673, when Fort Cataracoui (Frontenac) was built
 
General Phips* took Acadia in 1690, and lodged a complaint with the Earl of Bellomont, governor of Massachusetts. Late in 1695 La Tour was cited in dispatches by Frontenac
; Buade* de Frontenac wrote in 1697: “It is true that four years ago the Sieur Sarrazin was surgeon-major of the colonial regular troops, and that . . . [he had] retired a year previously to a
 
 October (16 October, N.S.) to deliver an ultimatum to Buade* de Frontenac to surrender. Savage was “carried
Iroquois by Buade* de Frontenac, governor of Canada – was taken back to Albany by Schuyler. The Iroquois called
 
everyone were unanimously in favour of La Touche. On 15 Oct. 1698 Buade* de Frontenac and Champigny
 
. In 1682, after the western Iroquois had attacked the French allies, the Illinois and Miamis, Teganissorens came to Montreal and persuaded the governor general, Frontenac
 
, Agonstot, interceded, however, and persuaded the other Iroquois to set Tonty free. In July 1684 Tekanoet was taken hostage at Fort Frontenac by
colonial regular troops in the expedition launched by Buade* de Frontenac in the direction of Fort Orange (Albany, N.Y
 
, Frontenac, and Pontchartrain (Detroit), captain in the colonial regular troops, younger brother of Henri Tonty; b
, above them. That summer he set out with five men by canoe along the north shore of Lake Erie, hoping to intercept a party of La Salle’s men who ought to have been homeward-bound to Fort Frontenac
 
of bands of Abenaki Indians during the attack in July on Oyster River (Durham, New Hampshire). Buade* de Frontenac
221 to 240 (of 395)
1...10  11  12  13  14  ...20