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                  241 to 260 (of 395)
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                  Buade* de Frontenac petitioned the king for help for him. Denys de La Ronde turned over his seigneury on the St Charles to a farmer, then on 1 Sept. 1680 bought a house in
                  de Denonville on a journey to Fort Frontenac (Cataracoui, now Kingston, Ont.), landing at frequent intervals to observe and calculate latitudes and to draw a map. During the next year, he was fully
                   
                  colonial regular troops, and the following year he was appointed commandant at Trois-Rivières. In 1692, in a memorandum to Governor Frontenac
                   
                  Buade de Frontenac at Cataracoui in the summer of 1673, Garakontié was the first to speak for them. He died of an illness in the winter of 1677–78, at an advanced age and was buried in European
                   
                  Kingston from Gildersleeve (part of Portland, Conn.) in 1816, and developed a flourishing shipping and shipbuilding business. He helped construct the Frontenac, the first steamboat on Lake Ontario
                   
                  Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.) was rumoured – an attack which occurred a few weeks later. Hotsinoñhyahtaˀ) went to Canada in the autumn of 1758. On his return he advised Johnson that a French expedition was
                   
                  Bay in 1689, and with Jolliet in Labrador in 1694, and it was he whom the king sent to warn Frontenac [see
                  , Les avocats de la région de Québec, 146. Frère Éloi-Gérard [Talbot], Recueil des généalogies des comtés de Beauce-Dorchester-Frontenac, 1625–1946 (11v., Beauceville, Qué., 1949–55), I
                  later, in 1695, the chief appeared at Montreal at a conference called for the upper lakes Indians. Buade* de Frontenac
                   
                  . Royal Fort Frontenac (Preston and Lamontagne), 34, 476. Philéas Gagnon, “Noms propres du Canada-Français
                   
                  “Lattoras”). Murdoch, History of Nova-Scotia, I. Parkman, Count Frontenac and New France (24th ed.). Webster, Acadia.
                   
                  Gazette, 11 Feb. 1802. Charland, “Notre-Dame de Québec: le nécrologe de la crypte,” BRH, 20: 273. Tanguay, Dictionnaire, 6: 295, 300. Royal Fort Frontenac, trans
                   
                  tactics. Fort Frontenac (Kingston, Ont.) had fallen in August, however, food supplies were low, Indian allies were deserting, the season was late, and
                   
                  Buade* de Frontenac’s orders, he went by boat from Quebec to Beaubassin to take gifts to the Indians. This mission seems to have been criticized by the king in a memorandum of April 1693 addressed
                   
                  perhaps one of the reasons why Buade* de Frontenac took him
                   
                  in contact with his friends in Canada, particularly with Buade* de Frontenac, who gave him news of the colony in a
                   
                  of lieutenant he took part in Lieutenant-Colonel John Bradstreet*’s expedition which captured and destroyed Fort Frontenac (Kingston
                   
                  permission, Jacques returned to France in 1693 to request letters of pardon. Considering that he received support from Frontenac
                   
                  24 Dec. 1693, which was concluded before Frontenac [Buade*], the protector of the Recollets, for
                  Murray Gibbon. In 1927, 1928, and 1930 the quartet was on the program of the Canadian Folk Song and Handicraft Festival, which was held in those years mainly in the Château Frontenac at Quebec. This series
                  241 to 260 (of 395)
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