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. . . (Winnipeg, 1893); “The proposed new route from British North America,” Westminster Rev. (New York and London), 144 (July–December 1895): 178–92; “How to consolidate the empire,” Empire Rev
 
memorable voyage occurred in 1862, when Murray attended Presbyterian assemblies in Edinburgh and the International Exhibition in London. During it he composed accounts of the Atlantic crossing, the exhibition
in the life of John Wilson Murray was first published in London in 1904. Victor Speer’s involvement is not mentioned in this version, but he is identified (as compiler and editor respectively) in
 
presbytery in May 1849, Murray returned to the Island. He was ordained minister of Cavendish and New London in January 1850, filling the vacancy left by the departure of John
(London), England, son of George Murray, bishop of Rochester, and Lady Sarah Maria Hay-Drummond, daughter of the 10th Earl of Kinnoull; m. 12 July 1859 Charlotte Letitia Caroline Arbuthnot (d
London. He resigned three years later and went to the United States, where he was attached to the Chilean delegation in Washington. At that point he began a distinguished career in journalism. From about
, excluding the question as to control of the disputed territory’s natural resources. In the summer of 1884 Mowat went to London and presented Ontario’s case on the boundary dispute to the JCPC with complete
. The third surviving daughter of 12 children, Clara H. Mountcastle (her full name remains unknown) was born into an artistic family that had left London, England, in 1832 to better its fortunes in
problems of accreditation aside, he made no formal application to the law society until 1878, was not called to the bar until 1883, and even then practised only intermittently, first in the London, Ont
 
fostering their connections with sister institutions in the Maritime provinces and elsewhere through the introduction of the University of London senior matriculation examinations. He was an invaluable member
 
interests of London, and it appears he was hoping for a joint venture. This plan fell through, mainly because the Harmsworth brothers, Alfred Charles William and Harold Sidney, became more interested in the
 
to considerable effort to promote his stock, taking animals to the Provincial Exhibition in London in 1854, for example, a feat that required travel by steamer to Hamilton and thence by rail to London
 
to 1869, in London. During this time he began extramural studies at the University of Toronto, from which he would receive a ba in 1872. In 1869 Millar started to teach
eastern Canada. He took command of companies at Fredericton, Saint-Jean (Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu), Que., London, Ont., and Toronto, and with these scattered units had to create a regimental system, a
 
, editor, and politician; b. 4 Feb. 1842 in Kilsby, England, son of John James Mason, a surgeon, and Susanna Sophia Stokes; m. 15 June 1869 Jessie Thompson Birrell in London, Ont., and
 
to embrace prohibition, but he was narrowly defeated by his Conservative rival. Marter now turned his attention to business. An agent for the London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Company, he founded
. F. Davin, The Irishman in Canada (London and Toronto, 1879; repr. Shannon, Republic of Ire., 1969), 284. William Dendy, Lost Toronto (Toronto, 1978). William Dendy et al
surviving son of John Mallandaine of the East India Company and Mary Smith; m. first 5 May 1855 in London, England; m. secondly 1 Sept. 1866 Louisa Townsend in Victoria, and they had
Church of England . . . (London, 1897). Marian Keith [M. E. Miller (MacGregor)], The black bearded barbarian: the life of George Leslie Mackay of Formosa (Toronto
, Newfoundland and London Telegraph Company (which was to be amalgamated with the Anglo-American Telegraph Company in 1873), whose operations consisted of a line across the island and a link with Cape Breton
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