moved to Kamloops, partly because of the good sportfishing in the area. In August 1889 he joined the local law firm of William Ward Spinks. From 1891 to 1900 Fulton acted as administrator and judge of the
1905 the Royal Securities Corporation Limited, which was backed by a syndicate of Halifax financiers and managed by William Maxwell
Wolseley* and the Canadian voyageurs on their unsuccessful expedition to relieve Major-General Charles George Gordon in Khartoum in 1884–85.
Work on
, there was one more assignment for Gordon. In February 1922 Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King
Gordon, Charles William (also known as Ralph Connor), Presbyterian minister, author
pasteurization of milk, mount campaigns to eradicate cholera, typhoid, and tuberculosis, and offer a prize (unclaimed) for a cure for cancer. These initiatives followed the example of James Gordon Bennett, editor
. Her father (the second son of the 2nd Earl Grey) was lieutenant-colonel of the 71st Foot at the time of the uprising in the Canadas [see William Lyon
HAMILTON-GORDON (Gordon), JOHN CAMPBELL, 7th Earl of ABERDEEN and 1st Marquess of ABERDEEN and
predecessors William Canniff* and Charles Sheard*, Hastings understood the importance of
William Peterson*, offered Hurlbatt the position of warden of Royal Victoria College
.
Charles Kingsmill was born into a family that belonged to an exceptionally close-knit social group in Upper Canada. His paternal grandfather, William Kingsmill, an Irish Anglican, was a veteran of the
motion by Frederick William Gordon Haultain* in 1892 that had begun
[Hamilton-Gordon] as the new governor general; he had also taken his portrait and that of his wife, Lady Aberdeen
with Jacob Gould Schurman, chemistry with George Lawson*, and physics with James Gordon
Bennet*; William Caven*]. His later concept of the United Church of Canada, according to which “all things work together for good to them that
he was appointed George Munro* professor of English at Dalhousie University in Halifax, succeeding William John
, journalist, physician, university professor, author, editor, agricultural experimenter, and army officer; b. 24 Nov. 1864 in Orwell, P.E.I., fourth of the ten surviving children of William
MARJORIBANKS, ISHBEL MARIA (Hamilton-Gordon (Gordon), Countess of ABERDEEN and Marchioness of ABERDEEN and TEMAIR
Township, Upper Canada, third child of William McKenzie and Catherine Shiells; m. 18 Aug. 1907 Ethel O’Neil (d. 1952) in Dublin; they had no children; d. 28 April 1938 in
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