teach the Ojibwa there about Christianity. When Horden sailed for London in 1872 to be consecrated first bishop of Moosonee, he left Sanders in charge of mission work at Moose Factory. As Sanders
.
William Chamberlain Silver’s father, the son of an Anglican cleric, left his home in Hampshire, England, as a youth to become an apprentice with a London silk mercer. Drawn overseas by the bustle of war, he
(Charlottetown, 1901), 118. Thomas Pakenham, The Boer War (London, 1979), 299–342
.
Like many Nova Scotians, and particularly those in business, Vail was strongly opposed to the proposals for colonial union put forward at the Charlottetown, Quebec, and London conferences between 1864
toured hospitals in London, he spent most of his two years abroad studying in Paris.
On his return to Quebec, Vallée was licensed to practise in
). Cyclopædia of Canadian biog. (Rose and Charlesworth), vol.2. R. C. Fetherstonhaugh and G. R. Stevens, The Royal Canadian Regiment . . . (2v., Montreal and London
country between Port Arthur (Thunder Bay), Ont., and the Rockies. Often she entered exhibitions. She took pride in a diploma and medal won at the Colonial and Indian Exhibition in London, England, in 1886
, written in Newfoundland (London, 1839), and Mrs M. S. Peace, who wrote The convict
account of the Tallahassee incident was published under the title “The ‘Tallahassee’s’ dash into New York waters,” Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine (New York and London), new ser., 34
, in London and Wallaceburg. His ambitions, however, drew him increasingly into public affairs.
By the early 1880s Wrigley was attracted to journalism
, that it had “wrought a great revolution,” he never fully understood Charles Darwin’s hypothesis.
Smith spent the late 1840s in London and in travels
professionalism. The confrontation between Luard and Caron stemmed from two different points of view: the imperialist concept, coming from London, of what the Canadian militia ought to be, and the attitude of
Ward became one of Victoria’s most important such merchants, aided by his connection to the London-based Bank of British Columbia through his brother William C. Ward, the local manager. In the
, Ferguson was the only minister to accompany Sullivan to London, and he regularly travelled with Sullivan and later with Premier Neil McLeod* on
Murray’s Memoirs of a great detective: incidents 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
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
, Scarth set off for London to work for Buchanan’s associate, Adam Hope*. In 1865 he followed Hope to Hamilton and in 1868 he moved to Toronto to work
(London), England, before returning to Ireland for four years of professional training under W. H. Owen, an architect and civil engineer in Limerick. His first job after he qualified was to assist
interest in advanced education and served as registrar of the University of Manitoba from 1883 to 1893. In 1886 he sent a collection of daily class assignments to the Colonial and Indian Exhibition in London
Canadian Entomologist (London, Ont.) and the Canadian Bee Journal (Beeton, Ont.). A chronological listing of these and several other contributions is available in Science and technology