DCB/DBC Mobile beta
+

Results per Page: Go
Modify search on Advanced Search page

Type of Result

      Region of Birth

          Region of Activities

              Occupations and Other Identifiers

                  161 to 180 (of 267)
                  1...7  8  9  10  11  ...14
                   
                  respectability in Victorian Halifax,” Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth Hist. (London), 20 (1991–92): 169–95.  j.f
                   
                  was also the Canadian representative on the international board in New York and in this capacity represented Canada at the International Congress of Women held in London in 1899
                   
                  , 1906/7–1911, annual reports of the Royal North-West Mounted Police, app., 1906–10. D. T. Hanbury, Sport and travel in the northland of Canada (London, 1904). P. L. Neufeld
                   June Dixon and Nunc Wallace, the British bantam- and featherweight champion, fought in London, England. At the end of 18 rounds Wallace’s
                   
                  of Kildare (Republic of Ireland) and of St Joseph’s Academy in London until 1888. From then on he was secretary to the visitors in Manhattanville (New York) and Castletown (Republic of Ireland
                   
                  the Royal Medico-Psychological Association of London. DeWolf returned to Nova Scotia in 1841 to practise medicine in Kentville, and after a brief sojourn in Brigus, Nfld, in 1844, he moved to Halifax
                  between reason and revelation. Macleod, and the London periodical he edited, Good Words, exposed Grant as well to such broad-church writers as Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Thomas Arnold, Julius Charles
                  and Home Magazine of London, Ont. [see William Weld*], put up a prize for the best three dairy cattle in the province and Jones’s
                  to continue his education. After receiving his diploma in surgery, he stayed in Europe and spent time in London, Dublin, Paris, Berlin, Heidelberg, and Vienna
                   pounds of Canadian honey at the Colonial and Indian Exhibition in London, England. All of it was sold profitably. In 1893 disaster struck the
                   
                  lines in Canada and was a partner in the New York, Newfoundland and London Telegraph Company, founded in 1854, which was responsible for the first transatlantic cable, completed in 1866 [see
                   
                  . A. A. Talbot, “A wheat hospital,” Windsor Magazine (London, Eng.), 19 (1903–4): 729–34. Patricia Verwoort, “Lakehead terminal elevators: factors affecting survival,” Soc
                   
                  (1918), sect.ii: 135–50; Old silver of Europe & America from early times to the nineteenth century, etc. (London, 1928
                  . . . (London, 1873; repr. Edmonton, 1968). D. [P.] Payment, Batoche (1870–1910) (Saint
                   
                  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
                   
                  McCHESNEY, SARAH (Hayward), teacher; b. 16 Nov. 1839 in London, England
                   
                  government of St. John’s, Newfoundland, 1800–1921” (phd thesis, Univ. of Western Ont., London, 1981). B. C. Busch, The war against the seals: a
                  . (London), 20 (1991–92): 169–95. R. W. Winks, The blacks in Canada
                  Canadian Art Hist. (Montreal), 3 (1976–77): 21–43. W. K. Lamb, History of the Canadian Pacific Railway (New York and London, 1977). O [-S.-A.] Lavallée, Van Horne’s road
                  . It also had retail outlets in Montreal, Winnipeg, Toronto, and Vancouver, and sold on consignment in London and
                  161 to 180 (of 267)
                  1...7  8  9  10  11  ...14