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                  621 to 640 (of 713)
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                  ROUILLARD, EUGÈNE (baptized Nicolas-Olivier-Eugène), notary, journalist, office holder, author, and geographer; b. 4
                   
                  handed over to Grothé until the contract had been signed in the presence of a notary. In 1796 Rousseau again became a merchant, moved into a house on
                  Dafoe and notary Joseph Sirois. Rowell hesitated because he realized that he would have less time to
                   
                  ROY, dit Châtellerault, MICHEL, soldier, settler, seigneurial notary
                  ROY, JOSEPH-EDMOND, editor, notary, politician, historian, and office holder; b. 7
                  matriculation diploma as a sufficient prerequisite for the study of law, medicine, or the profession of notary. The hapless orator’s apologies were not enough. The seminary’s governing council demanded that he
                   
                  cantor, school master, notary, and parish secretary. In 1688 Rémy was appointed chaplain of the Montreal Hôtel-Dieu. In August 1689 the massacre of
                   
                  total bankruptcy for him and his friends. On 1 April 1756, before the notary Jean-Claude Panet
                   
                  SAILLANT (Saillant de Collégien), JEAN-ANTOINE (Antoine-Jean), royal notary
                   
                  . Annette Saint-Amant was the granddaughter and daughter of notaries. A native of Deschambault, Lower Canada, her father had moved to L’Avenir, where he began practising his profession in 1884; he was also a
                  . 25 Feb. 1657 in Montreal, daughter of Jean de Saint-Père*, a notary, and
                   
                  SAINT-PÈRE, JEAN DE, clerk of court, notary, and syndic; b
                   
                  Glapion*, signed the official papers appointing Mathieu Hianveu notary for the seigneuries of Notre-Dame-des-Anges, Saint-Gabriel, Sillery, and Bélair. This was probably the Jesuits’ last seigneurial
                   
                  Mémoires, XI (1960), 21–23), Claude de La Tour usually signed his name “de Saint-Étienne,” but two notarial acts call him “Turgis, dit Saint-Étienne, écuyer, sieur de La Tour” and “Claude
                   
                  SANGUINET, SIMON, merchant, notary, lawyer, and judge of the Court of Common Pleas; b. 11 Feb. 1733 at Varennes (Que
                   
                  , where his father was a notary. Nothing is known of the formative period of his life other than that in 1820 he studied for a year at the Petit Séminaire de Québec. Contemporaries attributed his superior
                   
                  single craftsman. His commercial ventures were certainly not confined to silverware. On 21 May 1784, in the presence of notary Edward William
                   
                  . 1 Aug. 1841 in Glasgow, Scotland, ninth of the ten children of Alexander Sellar, a notary, and Isabella Grant; m
                   
                  . 20 Aug. 1828 at Elgin, Scotland, fourth of ten children born to Alexander Sellar, notary, and Isabella Grant; d. 27 Oct. 1867 in
                   
                  SENET, dit Laliberté, NICOLAS, corporal, royal notary, son of Pierre and
                  621 to 640 (of 713)
                  1...30  31  32  33  34  ...36