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then moved to Shediac, which, unlike Chatham, was the heart of a francophone area, well served by communications, and close to the College of St Joseph in Memramcook, the centre of Acadian
-Joseph Papineau*’s supporters. He advocated instead a federation of the British North American colonies, putting forth all the arguments
 
LEE, WALTER SUTHERLAND, businessman and office holder; b. 18 Oct. 1836 in Toronto, son of Joseph Lee and Maria Shanks; m. 2
. Machray studied mathematics at King’s College, Aberdeen, and at Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, graduating with an ma from King’s College in 1851 and a
, militia officer, politician, and office holder; b. 6 Nov. 1833 in Terrebonne, Lower Canada, son of Joseph Masson* and Marie-Geneviève
 
MICHAUD, JOSEPH (baptized François-Xavier-Joseph), Roman Catholic priest
,” with the authority to act in any part of the province. In 1884 he moved to an office on King Street West, Toronto. Murray’s appointment was a
. In 1881 McCausland’s eldest son, Robert, became a partner in the firm. Occupying four buildings on King Street West, Joseph McCausland and Son had from 70 to 100 employees; the rooms where glass
 John Joseph Caldwell Abbott*], as a trustee of the Tiffin Library, and as an active member of the Art Association of Montreal, the
. Jean Berloin, dit Nantel, an ancestor of Guillaume-Alphonse Nantel, immigrated to New France in 1690. His descendant Joseph (1757–1833) was the first to abandon the name Berloin altogether, in
because of its status as a secret society. He first tackled Toronto’s archbishop, John Joseph Lynch*, on this subject in 1884 and won his
, Daniel McNeill Parker spent six years in public school in Petite before studying at King’s College School and Horton Academy. He began his medical training as an apprentice to William Bruce
ba at King’s College and an ma at Trinity College, and was called to the bar in 1850. His practice over the next decade consisted mostly of commercial matters
. The bishop of Chatham also relied extensively on other religious orders, such as the Sisters of Charity, the Religious Hospitallers of St Joseph, and the Congregation of Notre-Dame. He solicited
, rector of St James’ Church, Saint John, as well as at King’s College, Windsor, N.S. Ordained deacon in 1864 and priest the following year, he served mission churches in New Brunswick, notably at
Mackenzie King*, to mediate. The resulting settlement increased pay and established a grievance procedure, but it did not give formal
 
executive officer of the Nova Scotian Institute of Natural Science. Silver sent three of his sons to King’s College and became a governor of the college as well as a long-time vice-president of its alumni
. Once the dust had settled and John Joseph Caldwell Abbott* had reluctantly agreed to serve as prime minister (from the Senate), it
1892 Joseph Wilson Lawrence* had entrusted Stockton with his massive research notes on New Brunswick’s pre-confederation judiciary. In
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