. . . (London, 1873; repr. Edmonton, 1968). D. [P.] Payment, Batoche (1870–1910) (Saint
provincial inspector of prisons, asylums, and public charities, who had also served during the Fenian raids. When Malden was incorporated into the regional asylum opened in London later that year, Lett
as priest at Newtownbutler in County Fermanagh. These were bad times in Ireland because of the Great Famine and Lewis’s mother emigrated to Canada in 1848, settling near London. The next year Lewis
. Stelmack (2v., Ottawa, 1968–69), 2. H. J. Morgan, Sketches of celebrated Canadians . . . (Quebec and London, 1862; repr. Montreal, 1865). Standard dict. of Canadian biog
. . . (London, [1924]). Marguerite Woodworth, History of the Dominion Atlantic Railway ([Kentville, N.S.], 1936).
LYNN, WASHINGTON FRANK, artist, journalist, and author; b. c. 1827 or c. 1837 in Chelsea (London), England, second
(London, Ont.), 17 June 1905. Catholic Register, 1, 8 June 1905
, 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
of the Presbyterian Church of England . . . (London, 1897). Marian Keith [M. E. Miller (MacGregor)], The black bearded barbarian: the life of George Leslie Mackay
. first 5 May 1855 in London, England; m. secondly 1 Sept. 1866 Louisa Townsend in
. N. 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
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, with the assistance of his son, Edward
Susanna Sophia Stokes; m. 15 June 1869 Jessie Thompson Birrell in London, Ont., and they had
for 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
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
London in 1854, for example, a feat that required travel by steamer to Hamilton and thence by rail to London. Throughout the 1860s Miller was one of the most aggressive breeders, importers, exhibitors, and
. A year later he was negotiating with the Harmsworth publishing interests of London, and it appears he was hoping for a joint venture. This plan fell through, mainly because the Harmsworth brothers
London senior matriculation examinations. He was an invaluable member of Methodist boards and executive committees, and there was no aspect of education in Newfoundland which escaped his attention
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., firm of Ephraim Jones
London, England, in 1832 to better its fortunes in Upper Canada. Like other well-born immigrants the Mountcastles struggled to make a living in the bush, with Sidney either farming or engaged in a variety