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  Biographie – ZHEEWEGONA...  
En 1781, ce dernier alla trafiquer à Gloucester House, mais il n’y revint pas avant 1783 ; cette année-là, il signala que l’épidémie de petite vérole de 1781–1782 avait emporté un certain nombre de membres de sa bande, de même que beaucoup d’Indiens au sud-ouest du lac Saint-Joseph.
He is first mentioned by John Kipling, chief trader at Gloucester House (Washi Lake, Ont.), who reported in 1780 that Zheewegonab was on his way to Albany with three canoes. Kipling’s later remark that the Indian was pleased with the treatment he received there may indicate that Zheewegonab had been dealing with Montreal-based traders during the 1770s. In 1781 he traded at Gloucester House, but did not appear there again until 1783, when he reported that the smallpox epidemic of 1781–82 had killed a number of his band members, as well as many Indians southwest of Lake St Joseph.
  Biographie – EVANS, THO...  
Evans rejoignit le 8e régiment au début de 1798 et se signala tout particulièrement à l’attention de ses supérieurs par sa conduite comme lieutenant et comme adjudant au cours de la campagne d’Égypte en 1801.
Evans rejoined the 8th Regiment early in 1798 and won special recognition for his services as lieutenant and adjutant during the Egyptian campaign of 1801. On 19 Nov. 1803, while serving at Gibraltar, he purchased his captaincy – an advancement influenced by the patronage of the Duke of Kent [Edward Augustus*] and Evans’ commanding officer, Colonel Gordon Drummond*. Shortly after Drummond’s promotion to major-general on 1 Jan. 1805, Evans was seconded to his staff as aide-de-camp. He served the first half of 1808 with the 8th, but by August he was in Quebec, again seconded to Drummond, now second in command in British North America. Evans was later military secretary to Drummond until the general’s recall in the summer of 1811. At that time Captain Evans was posted to Upper Canada as brigade-major to Major-General Isaac Brock*.
  Biographie – LANGMAN, E...  
Il semble que certains griefs des marchands étaient fondés, car le successeur de Langman, Walter Price, trouva la mission mal tenue ; il signala que les morts n’avaient pas été ensevelis et qu’il n’y avait pas de vases sacrés pour l’administration des sacrements.
By 1781 the new Anglican church in St John’s, whose construction Langman had initiated in 1758, possessed a large porch, a tower for five bells, and a handsome clock, the gift of Governor Richard Edwards. Langman, however, was in ill health: years of missionary work and cold weather had left him stricken with gout. Moreover, in 1784 several merchants again complained about his behaviour, and this, together with Langman’s letters about his gout, led to his dismissal in January 1784. Some of the merchants’ complaints seem to have been justified, since Walter Price, Langman’s successor, reported finding the mission neglected, with the dead unburied and no plate for the sacrament. Langman died in St John’s shortly after his dismissal.
  Biographie – McCARTHY, ...  
Cependant, après avoir parcouru l’ouest de l’Ontario au début de 1894, l’organisateur de la ligue, William G. Fee, signala que le programme avait été diffusé dans plusieurs circonscriptions et que l’avenir s’annonçait fort bien.
McCarthy vowed to take an independent stand on the cross-benches, where his actions in the 1893 session were at odds with the government on the two most important issues before the house, schools and tariff reform. By the end of the session that spring, encouraged by widespread support, McCarthy had founded the Equal Rights League, a third party based upon his familiar themes. Its planks supported tariff reform and opposed any coercion of the provinces in matters of language or education. They constituted the McCarthyite defence against French Canadian encroachments on the true nationalization of Canada and expressly denied that confederation promised French-speaking and English-speaking Canadians an equal share in the new western domain.
  Biographie – KETCHUM, S...  
Toutefois, en 1835, le missionnaire anglican Adam Elliot* le trouva dans le canton de Mono où, signala-t-il, il avait « déjà fondé plusieurs écoles du dimanche et enseigné le catéchisme anglican à plus de cent personnes ».
In 1820 Ketchum secured a land grant in Mono Township, near the present Orangeville, and over the years he added considerably to his holdings there. He was still living on Yonge St in 1830, when he signed a petition to incorporate a turnpike company, and in 1831 was still buying land there. In 1835, however, Anglican missionary Adam Elliot* found him at Mono, noting that he had already “formed several Sunday Schools, and instructed above a hundred persons in the Church catechism.” In his new home, indeed, Ketchum soon outdid his previous efforts in church extension. In 1837 he built a log church on his own land that was the precursor of St Mark’s, Orangeville, and local tradition credits him with the foundation of at least half a dozen Anglican churches in the area. He also made several large gifts of land to the church, for purposes ranging from the support of theological students to the foundation of a “Sailors’ Home.”
  Biographie – DUVAL, EDM...  
En tant que directeur de cette école modèle, qui fut pendant presque 20 ans le seul établissement de formation des maîtres après l’incendie de la Fredericton Normal School en 1850, et aussi en tant qu’inspecteur des écoles à partir de 1858, Duval signala sans cesse ce problème de salaire dans ses rapports officiels.
Duval’s efforts to raise the standards of life were not limited to formal education. As a young man he is said to have worked for the benefit of the Jews of East London. He was an active Christian, gaining a licence to preach from the Germain Street Baptist Church of Saint John in 1870. In the last years of his life he worked hard to improve the deplorable lot of the Negroes in Saint John, not through missionary zeal, as might have been expected, but by trying to induce the spirit and practice of self-help.
  Biographie – STAUNTON, ...  
Les instructions faisaient mention de variations délicates dans les prix payés pour les fourrures ; il semble que Staunton sut s’acquitter de sa tâche de manière satisfaisante, et lorsqu’il fut rappelé en 1715, ce fut à sa propre requête, car on lui avait refusé l’augmentation sollicitée. En 1716, toutefois, son successeur, Thomas McCliesh signala que les hommes indisciplinés d’Albany avaient fait ce qu’ils avaient voulu de Staunton.
With the treaty of Utrecht and the reoccupation of York, Albany lost some of its importance, but it remained the company’s main post for opposing the French coureurs de bois from the south. Staunton, made chief factor there in 1714, was instructed to “trade hard” with Indians from the north so that they would take their furs to York, but to entice Indians from the south away from French traders and draw over trade from the Eastmain River. These orders involved delicate variations in the prices paid for furs, but Staunton appears to have given satisfaction, and when he was recalled in 1715 it was at his own request since a raise in pay had been rejected. In 1716, however, his successor, Thomas McCliesh, reported that the unruly men at Albany had done what they liked with Staunton.
  Biographie – CRISAFY, A...  
Antoine se signala particulièrement en 1692 lorsque le gouverneur de Callière lui confia le commandement des troupes de Sault-Saint-Louis. Il réussit par ruse à déjouer les tentatives de 800 Iroquois qui avaient formé le projet de détruire la colonie française.
Antoine distinguished himself particularly in 1692, when Governor Callière entrusted him with the command of the troops at Sault-Saint-Louis. By using guile he succeeded in thwarting the attempts of 800 Iroquois who had made plans to destroy the French colony. After this exploit Callière’s friendship for Crisafy never faltered. In 1696, at the time of Buade* de Frontenac’s expedition against the Iroquois, Crisafy, with Captain Raymond Blaise Des Bergères, was made responsible for guarding the recently constructed fort of Onondaga, where the boats, supplies, and ammunition required for the expedition were located.
  Biographie – FITZGERALD...  
Francis Joseph Fitzgerald, signala-t-on avec raison, avait commis plusieurs fautes : il avait été trop confiant, n’avait pas engagé un guide autochtone, avait réduit les rations et n’avait pas rebroussé chemin dès qu’il avait vu que Carter ne trouvait pas la piste.
Fitzgerald was rightly criticized for overconfidence, failing to take a native guide, reducing rations, and not turning back sooner when Carter was unable to find the trail. Time, however, has blurred these failings of the Lost Patrol, as it became known, and Fitzgerald and his men are largely remembered for their heroic struggle to survive. Following the tragedy, Commissioner Perry issued instructions for emergency caches of food to be left along the route from Dawson to Fort McPherson, and for all patrols by the police over routes unknown to them to be accompanied by experienced guides.
  Biographie – OUTRAM, si...  
Son grand-père paternel, le lieutenant-général James Outram, avait reçu un titre de baronet pour conduite exceptionnelle pendant la révolte des cipayes. Son père se signala aussi dans l’armée. Dans sa carrière de ministre du culte, James manifesta son dynamisme.
Public distinction marked the family legacy that James Outram inherited. His paternal grandfather, Lieutenant-General James Outram, was created a baronet for outstanding service in the Indian Mutiny, and his father also distinguished himself in the military. Outram’s clerical career reveals the extent of his own drive. A graduate of Pembroke College, Cambridge (ba 1888, ma 1893), he was ordained deacon in 1889 and priest in 1890. He was curate of Holy Trinity Church in Hampstead (London) and then of Thorpe in Norfolk; from 1896 he was vicar of St Peter’s, Ipswich. In 1900 he suffered a mental breakdown from overwork.
  Biographie – OSLER, sir...  
À McGill, il manifesta de grandes aptitudes intellectuelles. Non seulement se classa-t-il premier à l’examen final, mais, signe annonciateur de ses réalisations futures, il reçut un prix spécial pour sa thèse, dont on signala l’originalité.
In Bovell and Howard, Osler had the good fortune to have advisers who exemplified the best in functional, day-to-day, unrehearsed humanism and in humane care for the sick. Their example undoubtedly strengthened his own natural inclinations. This humanistic tradition is important in explaining the respected position which Osler continues to hold today as a role model for students. He proved to be a fine scholar at McGill, as shown by his coming first in the final examination. Even more important, particularly as a forecast of accomplishments to come, was the award of a special prize for his thesis, which was distinguished for its originality.
  Biographie – COCHRAN, W...  
Mais lors d’une réunion du conseil d’administration, le 12 octobre 1789, Inglis signala que l’archevêque n’avait pas trouvé les personnes en question ; le conseil décida donc d’offrir la direction à Cochran.
In 1821 Cochran, on the advice of physicians, travelled to the United States “in the hopes of removing a serious complaint in his chest.” The following year, though “far from well,” he returned to Nova Scotia and resumed his duties as professor and clergyman. That age was beginning to take its toll was evident in his reports to the SPG, which became more sporadic and less detailed. In October 1831 he resigned his appointments in the college. He died in Windsor on 4 Aug. 1833 and was buried in the Old Parish Burying Ground. One of his sons, James Cuppaidge*, was a prominent Anglican clergyman in Nova Scotia. Another, Andrew William*, served as civil secretary to three governors of Lower Canada – Sir George Prevost*, Sir John Coape Sherbrooke, and Lord Dalhousie – and also sat on the Executive Council of that province.
  Biographie – WELLS, EMM...  
Dans sa nécrologie, le Morning Chronicle de Halifax signala qu’elle « croyait fermement en l’Israël britannique et étudiait les écrits prophétiques », mais ne parla nullement de sa production littéraire.
Dickson reputedly wrote children’s stories as well as adult fare, but she seems to have disappeared from literary view in the late 1890s. Active in St Paul’s Church in Halifax and in charitable pursuits until she became an invalid towards the end of her life, she died in 1926, three years after her husband. Her obituary in the Halifax Morning Chronicle described her as “a firm believer in British Israel, and a student of the prophetic writings,” but made no mention of her literary output. Yet the lively dialogue, humorous play, and intelligence of her heroine in Miss Dexie all reflect her considerable adeptness at writing popular fiction.
  Biographie – ELLIOT, RO...  
Elliot exerça de l’influence au Bureau de commerce jusqu’à ce que la maladie qui devait l’emporter, probablement une affection cardiaque, l’empêche de participer aux réunions. Il se signala aussi par l’insistance avec laquelle il réclama du gouvernement la formation d’une commission ferroviaire.
Elliot further demonstrated public-spiritedness and broad horizons as the first president of the Canadian Manufacturers’ Association, member of the Toronto Harbour Trust, director for some years of the Toronto Industrial Exhibition, and president of the Toronto Rowing Club and of the St George’s Society. He also belonged to the National Club, a large, continuing luncheon club that was a bastion of the new Liberals (Reform party), whom he supported. “A strong believer in mutual fire insurance,” Elliot served among the officers of the Fire Insurance Exchange Corporation. He and his family were active members of Jarvis Street Baptist Church, referred to in a contemporary guide as “the chief Baptist basilica” in Toronto.
  Biographie – JACKSON, J...  
Au cours de sa dernière année à Long Point, Jackson signala que 102 fidèles s’étaient ajoutés aux 404 membres que sa communauté comptait en 1819, et, à Westminster, le nombre d’adhérents passa de 356 à 475.
Jackson was popular among the church’s followers. John Saltkill Carroll*, a colleague, said that he “was certainly one of the most attractive preachers of that day,” an assessment reflected in the success he enjoyed. During his last year at Long Point he reported an increase of 102 members from the 404 recorded in 1819, and at Westminster membership grew from 356 to 475. It was at this time, however, that conflict arose between Jackson and the church’s leaders, including William Case, and a major part of the 1822 session of the Genesee Conference was spent debating his status. A motion to expel him was reduced to a temporary suspension of his ministry and a reproof from the presiding bishop. Despite the questions raised about his temperament and style of ministry he was ordained a preacher in 1824 and reassigned to the Westminster circuit the following year.
  Biographie – HUGUES, KA...  
Elle ravala donc sa colère et son amertume et se mit en route pour l'Australie. En février 1921, le journal catholique de Melbourne, l'Advocate, signala sa présence. Dans les mois suivants, comme elle l'avait fait au Canada, elle prit contact avec des militants locaux, réunit des groupes irlandais disparates et lança en Australie et en Nouvelle-Zélande des ligues pour l'autodétermination.
Bitter and angry, and firmly convinced that she was being punished by the establishment, as personified by R. B. Van Horne, for her advocacy of Irish independence, but lacking resources to mount a legal challenge, Hughes headed to Australia. In February 1921 the Melbourne Catholic paper, the Advocate, reported her presence. In the following months Hughes, using the Canadian model, made contact with local activists, united disparate Irish groups, and successfully launched self-determination leagues in Australia and New Zealand.
  Biographie – DAVIES, si...  
Il fut reçu au barreau en Angleterre en 1866 et, après un séjour au cabinet juridique de Thomas Chitty à Londres, admis l’année suivante au barreau de l’île. Cet homme de belle apparence, à la pensée structurée, se signala bientôt par ses dons d’orateur et son adresse remarquable au cricket.
Of Huguenot background, Louis Davies’s paternal grandfather was born in Wales and came to the Island about 1812. Louis was educated at Charlottetown’s Central Academy and Prince of Wales College, and he subsequently read law at the Inner Temple in London. He was called to the bar in England in 1866 and, after a stint in the London law office of Thomas Chitty, on the Island a year later. Handsome and articulate, he quickly established a reputation as an orator and a first-rate cricket player. It was rumoured that his father, as the Island’s colonial secretary in 1869, invited his son to become solicitor general. In any event, young Davies did serve in that capacity in 1870 and 1872.
  FR:Biography – WITHROW,...  
Chef d’un groupe de fidèles à l’église Metropolitan de Toronto, prédicateur occasionnel et membre assidu de la Conférence, Withrow prit toujours une part active à l’œuvre pastorale de l’Église méthodiste du Canada, qui naquit de la fusion de 1874. Cependant, il se signala surtout comme directeur des publications, rédacteur en chef et auteur, et comme membre de la bureaucratie dont son Église était alors en train de se doter.
A class leader in the Metropolitan Church in Toronto, an occasional preacher, and a faithful member of conference, Withrow was always an active participant in the pastoral work of the Methodist Church of Canada, the body that resulted from the union of 1874. His principal roles were, however, as an editor and writer and as an influential figure in the church’s emerging bureaucracy. Here he made a significant contribution to the well-being of his beloved Methodist community and to the development of English-Canadian literary culture.
  Biographie – BLACKBURN,...  
Blackburn se signala, soit dans le journalisme, soit dans la politique, par sa conviction qu’il importait de discuter rationnellement des problèmes et par sa certitude que tout ce que Toronto pouvait faire, London le pouvait aussi bien.
Josiah Blackburn was one of the most important newspapermen of his day. He was also politically influential, whether as a supporter of George Brown, Sandfield Macdonald, or John A. Macdonald. His journalism and politics were both characterized by a conviction that rational discussion of the issues was important, and the belief that anything Toronto could do London could do as well.
  Biographie – BLAKE, SAM...  
L’organisme, rebaptisé Church Association of the Diocese of Toronto en 1873 à la suite d’une réorganisation, se signala surtout en fondant en 1877 la Protestant Épiscopal Divinity School (futur Wycliffe College), contrepartie évangélique du Trinity College, qui était ritualiste [V. James Paterson Sheraton*].
In 1869 Blake and other prominent Toronto Anglicans had founded the Evangelical Association, a low-church lobby against clerical and high-church domination of the diocese of Toronto. The most significant achievement of the association, which was reorganized as the Church Association in 1873, was the establishment in 1877 of the Protestant Episcopal Divinity School (later renamed Wycliffe College) as an evangelical response to the high-church teachings of Trinity College [
  Biographie – NORTON, JO...  
Sheaffe signala dans ses dépêches « la judicieuse position qu’avaient prise Norton et les Indiens qui l’accompagnaient ». Le 20 octobre, une semaine après la bataille, Sheaffe honora Norton en lui décernant le « grade de capitaine des Indiens confédérés », celui-là même que Joseph Brant avait eu pendant la Révolution américaine.
Sheaffe mentioned in his dispatches “the judicious position which Norton and the Indians with him had taken.” One week after the battle, on 20 October, Sheaffe honoured Norton by appointing him “to the Rank of Captain of the Confederate Indians” – the same rank that Joseph Brant had held during the American revolution. Sir George Prevost*, governor-in-chief of British North America, congratulated Norton upon his courage and perseverance, with advice “to keep up and increase the numbers of a description of Force so truly formidable to their Enemies and so capable of sustaining the good cause in which we are engaged.”
  Biographie – PIPES, WIL...  
Celui-ci affirmait que la préservation des forêts pouvait être « assurée par la loi aussi efficacement que par l’éducation populaire », ce que Pipes s’employa à réfuter en 1908. L’année suivante, comme Wilcox l’accusait d’avoir retardé l’inventaire forestier de la province qu’il avait promis de faire, il signala quelles étapes préliminaires avaient été franchies.
As commissioner of crown lands Pipes had to meet headlong Charles Smith Wilcox, a persistent critic of the department. In 1908 he sought to refute Wilcox’s notion that the preservation of the forests could be “brought about by law as effectively as it could be by the education of the people.” The next year he denied Wilcox’s charges that he had delayed a promised survey of the province’s forests, pointing out the preliminary steps already taken. After the session he went on two trips, largely in connection with the survey. On the second he died suddenly in Boston of a heart attack or stroke.
  Biographie – HASSALL, T...  
Il accompagna les explorateurs jusqu’au lac Athabasca, où Back signala que, « puisqu’il n’était pas habitué à parler sa langue maternelle, il n’était pas tout à fait apte à conduire un groupe pour la première fois parmi les Indiens ».
Two years later he was engaged as interpreter for the Arctic expedition of Commander George Back*. Hassall travelled with the expedition as far as Lake Athabasca, where Back reported that “being unaccustomed to speak his native tongue, he was not altogether adapted for the first introduction of a party amongst the Indians.” Hassall remained at Fort Resolution (N.W.T.) and Fort Reliance and rejoined the expedition in the spring of 1834 for its return to Norway House (Man.).
  Biographie – ANDERSON, ...  
Le père de James Anderson fut officier dans l’armée avant de diriger une plantation en Inde ; il rentra en Angleterre en 1817 et émigra dans le Haut-Canada en 1831. Parmi les membres de cette famille, on trouve le général sir James Outram, qui se signala en Inde, et le lieutenant-colonel Alexander Seton, un des héros du naufrage du
James Anderson’s father was first a military officer, then ran a plantation in India; he returned to England in 1817 and immigrated to Upper Canada in 1831. Relatives of the family included General Sir James Outram, who won renown in India, and Lieutenant-Colonel Alexander Seton, one of the heroes in the sinking of the
  Biographie – DAVIES, si...  
Dès son premier discours aux Communes – prononcé à peine ses malles défaites –, il se signala par sa détermination à s’en prendre à n’importe quel député des premiers bancs du gouvernement conservateur.
In 1882, when public hostility to him had receded, Davies was elected to the House of Commons for Queens, which he would represent until 1896, when he was returned for Queens West. Beginning with his maiden speech in the house, delivered almost before he had unpacked, he established a reputation for his willingness to take on any of the Conservative government’s front-benchers. He also advanced in the inner circles of his party. He faithfully supported Edward Blake*, and after Wilfrid Laurier* became leader in 1887, he emerged as Laurier’s Maritimes lieutenant and a trusted strategy adviser, particularly on the Manitoba school question, where he felt his Island experience gave him special competence. Elected president of the Maritime Provinces Liberal Association in 1893, he was responsible for organizing the region for the 1896 election, which brought the Liberals to power.
  Biographie – ESTCOURT, ...  
Au cours des derniers mois de 1838 et en 1839, en plus de remplir ses tâches régimentaires, Estcourt dirigea les travaux d’arpentage des routes, surtout ceux de la route Cayuga, depuis Niagara Falls jusqu’à London. Constatant le piètre état de cette route, il le signala aux autorités militaires.
for Halifax. After their arrival in June, they proceeded to La Prairie, Lower Canada, where the 43rd was temporarily stationed, and then in July travelled via the Ottawa River, the Rideau Canal, and Lake Ontario to the Niagara frontier in Upper Canada. In August they settled at Lundy’s Lane, not far from regimental headquarters at Drummondville (Niagara Falls). During the latter part of 1838 and in 1839, besides fulfilling his regimental duties, Estcourt busied himself conducting road surveys, particularly of the Cayuga Road from Niagara Falls to London, the poor condition of which he drew to the attention of military authorities. He and Caroline also engaged in the social life of the Niagara frontier, participating in sleighing parties, visiting Toronto on occasion, and sketching local scenery, particularly Niagara Falls. In late summer 1839 he was ordered to rejoin the depot companies of the 43rd at Portsmouth, England, and by September the couple had left the Canadas.
  Biographie – RUTHERFORD...  
Toutefois, Rutherford se signala surtout par son action contre la tuberculose bovine. Ce mal suscitait l’inquiétude à cause du risque qu’il représentait pour les humains, non pour les bêtes, et ces craintes avaient rapproché les vétérinaires des médecins et des bactériologistes.
But it is Rutherford’s work on the eradication of bovine tuberculosis that was his most important contribution. The threat to humans, not cattle, had focused attention on this disease and brought veterinarians into the realm of medical doctors and bacteriologists. (Rutherford claimed to have known of the interrelationship between bovine and human tuberculosis before its announcement in 1882 by Robert Koch, discoverer of the tuberculosis bacilli and the tuberculin for testing.) Rutherford’s personal concern, which dated back to his days at Bow Park, had been reinforced when his son died as an infant from tuberculosis contracted from contaminated milk, before the family left Portage la Prairie. His attack was three-pronged, the major thrust being his attempt to control the disease within the nation’s herds, as a program initiated by McEachran. It had become apparent by the late 1890s that the testing of general herds, the slaughter of infected cattle, and compensation were simply not feasible in Canada. Programs of this nature had been set up in various American states but had failed and all cost more than the Canadian government could afford. In 1894 McEachran established compulsory testing for imported pure-bred breeding cattle, which were considered the primary vectors. Such stock had to undergo quarantine at government stations; cattle that reacted were destroyed without compensation. Breeders opposed this program. Bovine tuberculosis and its transmission were still not well understood, the test gave ambiguous results, McEachran had acted in an autocratic way, and slaughter caused huge financial hardship. As a result the pure-bred cattle associations repeatedly demanded the cessation of testing. When Koch, in a controversial turnabout in 1901, claimed (wrongly) that the bovine form was not contagious to man, breeders became even more adamant.
  Biographie – SAUNDERS, ...  
William Saunders fut l’un des derniers autodidactes en sciences naturelles qui se signala au Canada. Il n’avait pourtant rien d’un amateur. Il était bien un professionnel en ce sens qu’il gagnait sa vie en tant que scientifique.
Although Saunders was one of the last of the self-taught natural scientists to rise to prominence in Canada, he was no amateur. He was a professional in the sense that he earned his living as a scientist. As an agriculturist, he made significant contributions to the settlement of the northwest and his work in establishing the experimental farms qualifies him as a pioneer of research and development in Canada.
  Biographie – McKINNON, ...  
de New York signala les exploits accomplis aux jeux de Brooklyn par « le célèbre athlète de Hamilton » dans des épreuves comme le lancer du marteau, du poids de 56 livres et de la pierre ainsi que dans une épreuve consistant à lancer le tronc d’un jeune mélèze.
reported the exploits of “the celebrated athlete from Hamilton” in events such as throwing the hammer and the 56-pound weight, putting the stone, and tossing the caber in the games held at Brooklyn. In August 1876 he won the North American championship at Charlottetown; he repeated his performance at Philadelphia the following year, and then retired.
  Biographie – PLUMB, JOS...  
de Toronto, Thomas Charles Patteson*, signala Plumb à l’attention de sir John Alexander Macdonald* dès 1872, le présentant comme une acquisition utile mais parfois déroutante pour le parti. Plumb entra en politique lors des élections générales de janvier 1874, en partie par respect désintéressé pour Macdonald, après le scandale du Pacifique.
, Thomas Charles Patteson*, as a useful though at that time erratic acquisition for the party. Plumb entered politics in the general election of January 1874, partly out of chivalrous regard for Macdonald after the Pacific Scandal. He was elected for the county of Niagara but the election was voided. In a new election on 22 December Plumb was successful.
  Biographie – THOMPSON, ...  
Le régiment combattit pour la première fois à Paardeberg (Perdeberg) du 18 au 27 février 1900. En cette occasion, Thompson se signala par le courage avec lequel il porta assistance à ses camarades. Le 18, il resta sept heures en terrain découvert, à comprimer une veine jugulaire du simple soldat James L. H. Bradshaw pour éviter l’hémorragie.
In October 1900 Thompson returned to Canada because of complications resulting from sunstroke. He went back to South Africa the next year as a lieutenant in the South African Constabulary, a position he kept less than a year before accepting employment with DeBeers Consolidated Mines at Kimberley. In Cape Town he married Bertha Alexander, whom he had met in Canada in 1898 and who had sailed to South Africa to join him. Thompson’s stay with DeBeers was also brief. When he suffered a fatal attack of appendicitis in 1908 he was in Buffalo, N.Y.
  Biographie – ANDRÉ DE L...  
Ce n’est qu’en 1741 que la belle Louise-Catherine se signala de nouveau. Déjà âgée de 32 ans, elle réussit à séduire le cœur d’un jeune officier, René-Ovide Hertel* de Rouville, plus jeune qu’elle de onze ans.
The Hertels went to live at Trois-Rivières, and of their marriage five children were born. Because of ill health Mme Hertel was unable, after the capitulation of Montreal in 1760, to follow her husband to France where, almost ruined, he was looking for employment. In 1763 he returned to Trois-Rivières and carried on the small business which Mme Hertel had set up to make a living during the sombre years of her husband’s absence. She lived for only three more years.
  Biographie – LUXTON, WI...  
Le journal ne manquait jamais de relever les indices d’erreur ou de perfidie de la part du cabinet ; par exemple, il signala le fait que celui-ci octroyait des subventions à la Compagnie du chemin de fer canadien du Pacifique pour le prolongement de lignes secondaires tout en fermant les yeux sur la complicité qui semblait exister entre cette société et la Northern Pacific Railroad Company pour maintenir le fret artificiellement haut.
soon turned against it as well, reporting every sign of cabinet backsliding and perfidy, such as giving the CPR grants for the extension of branch lines while choosing to ignore its apparent collusion with the Northern Pacific Railroad to keep freight rates artificially high. As for the emerging controversy over the Manitoba school question, the fighting editor, with more perception than discretion, characterized it as a fraudulent diversion of public indignation onto Franco-Manitoban Catholics, designed to distract voters from the Greenway government’s surrender to the railway barons.
  Biographie – KEEFER, FR...  
Par exemple, en tant que secrétaire de la Liberal-Conservative Association of West Algoma, il signala en 1891 au premier ministre du pays, sir John Alexander Macdonald*, qu'une nouvelle investiture de Simon James Dawson* ne serait pas bien accueillie.
After settling in Port Arthur, Keefer had also immersed himself in politics. As secretary of the Liberal-Conservative Association of West Algoma, for example, he advised Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald* in 1891 that feelings were against the renomination of Simon James Dawson*. Seeking election himself in 1908, he was defeated by James Conmee*. He eventually sat as the Unionist-Conservative mp for Port Arthur and Kenora from 1917 to 1921.
  Biographie – DOW, JEAN ...  
Dans ses premières années, la docteure Dow avait pratiqué des interventions chirurgicales simples, pour soigner par exemple des cataractes ou des morsures de loup, mais, au fil des ans, elle était passée à des traitements obstétriques compliqués et à l'usage des rayons X. Selon le docteur William McClure, elle se signala surtout en luttant contre le kala-azar, parasitose qui se transmet par piqûre d'un phlébotome et qui décimait les enfants du nord de la Chine.
Dow's practice had grown from simple surgery for such problems as cataracts and wolf bites to complicated obstetric treatments and X-rays. Her foremost achievement, with Dr William McClure, was her work on the microbe causing kala-azar, the sandfly-transmitted disease that decimated the children of north China. During the famine of 1920–21 she was credited with saving 400 expectant mothers and children. For her heroic services the Chinese government gave her a medal. She was held in the "highest esteem" too by her mission, as much for her physical and spiritual beauty and strong "womanhood" as for her medical skill.
  Biographie – BOWELL, si...  
Au moment où il quitterait la milice, en 1874, il serait lieutenant-colonel dans le 49th (Hastings) Battalion of Rifles. Au fil de ces décennies, Bowell se signala également au sein de l’ordre d’Orange, auquel il avait adhéré en 1842.
determination of duties meant that invoices could be, and often were, deliberately understated. The Customs Act clearly laid down that the invoiced value had to be based on fair market price in the country of origin. The board of appraisers reported to Bowell that its actions provoked grumblings and some enmity from importers, but customs was like that. As the board’s secretary, Charles Belford*, noted, “The ‘ignorant impatience of taxation’ is not confined to the thoughtless or the uneducated.”
  Biographie – FULLARTINE...  
Ses connaissances et son expérience du commerce de la fourrure et de la vie sur la terre de Rupert furent sûrement précieuses aux membres de la direction qui ne s’étaient jamais aventurés dans les parages du détroit d’Hudson. Jusqu’à sa mort à Newington Green, dans le Middlesex, en octobre 1738, Fullartine se signala par son travail consciencieux au sein du comité.
Fullartine was welcomed home by the committee on 2 Oct. 1711. By the time the general court was held on 27 November following, he had acquired enough HBC stock to allow for his election to the committee. His first-hand knowledge and experience of the fur trade and of life in Rupert’s Land were undoubtedly invaluable to his fellow members who never had ventured through Hudson Strait. Fullartine was a conscientious HBC committee member for many years until his death, in October 1738, at Newington Green, Middlesex.
  Biographie – BAIRD, NIC...  
Nicol Hugh Baird se signala avant tout par sa participation à l’aménagement des premiers réseaux de canaux et de routes du Haut et du Bas-Canada. Ses travaux furent le plus souvent d’envergure régionale, mais il eut quand même l’occasion de contribuer au creusage ou à l’amélioration de grandes voies navigables comme les canaux Rideau, Trent et Welland.
Baird’s most significant contribution lies in the development of early canal and road systems in Upper and Lower Canada. Associated most frequently with local works, he none the less had the opportunity to contribute to the development of major navigation systems such as the Rideau, Trent, and Welland canals. Until some time in the early 1840s he had access to those in office, who appear to have sought and respected his opinions about public works. Baird’s other, and perhaps greater, contribution is the volume of the historical record he left. Its completeness offers a rare opportunity to study early engineering in Canada.
  FR:Biography – LYMBURNE...  
Lymburner demeura en Angleterre après 1791 car il souffrait d’une « affection de type asthmatique – pour laquelle on lui signala que le terrible froid des hivers canadiens était extrêmement [...] nocif ».
Lymburner remained in England after 1791 with a “Complaint of an Asthmatic Nature – for which he was informed the severe cold of the winters in Canada was extremely . . . pernicious.” While recovering there, he took every opportunity to tender to government his views on Lower Canadian affairs. His paper on the Anglo-American tensions of 1793, which typically had no evident effect, did illustrate his grasp of the complex relationship between commerce and transatlantic diplomacy. In 1799 he returned to Quebec. Having ignored a warning from Dorchester in 1794 to attend the Executive Council or resign, he attempted to take his place in July but on a unanimous motion was ignominiously barred for non-attendance. His petitions to Britain in protest proved fruitless.
  Biographie – MARTER, GE...  
Le chef des conservateurs, William Ralph Meredith*, laissait une latitude relative aux membres du parti, et Marter, qui était méthodiste, se signala par de vigoureuses prises de position en faveur de la prohibition.
William Caven; D’Alton McCarthy*] he was associated with his party’s strong Protestant element. His leader, William Ralph Meredith, allowed party members considerable initiative and Marter a Methodist, established himself as a vigorous exponent of prohibition. In 1893 he introduced a bill barring the retail sale of liquor, but it was supplanted by a government measure requiring a court ruling on provincial jurisdiction in the matter. Marter was also one of the first legislators to advocate, in 1894, discontinuing the maintenance of Government House in the name of public economy. Like Meredith, he was critical of the Liberal government of Sir Oliver Mowat for enhancing the privileges of the separate schools. Finally, he placed new emphasis on improving party organization and canvassing at the constituency level.
  Biographie – CARVELL, F...  
Ni en public ni en privé, il n’abandonnait son sérieux. Même aux yeux de ses amis, il semblait ne pas avoir beaucoup le sens de l’humour ni savoir profiter de la vie. Comme le signala son propre journal, le Carleton Sentinel, il « ne savait pas jouer ».
Carvell had been a stern, combative man in public life, a man who took pleasure in punishing, withering criticism of his enemies. For all but a few he was aloof from supporters and colleagues and feared by his opponents. In his family life he was a sympathetic, loving, and generous husband and father, and he was passionately interested in his farm and cattle. Neither in public nor in private did he lose his serious demeanour. He seemed, even to friends, devoid of a strong sense of humour and the enjoyment of life. As his own newspaper, the Carleton Sentinel, observed, Frank Carvell “did not know how to play.”
  Biographie – ARNOLDI, D...  
À la fin de 1835, Beaubien, dans une lettre au chef du parti patriote, Louis-Joseph Papineau*, signala la nomination d’Arnoldi au poste de juge de paix en ces mots : « ne pouvons nous pas dire que l’administration dernière leur a adjoint de ces
Other incidents were to cause the leaders of the assembly to doubt Arnoldi’s sincerity. For example, his appointment by the governor as doctor to the Montreal jail in 1833 and his commission as a justice of the peace appeared suspect to many. Consequently the assembly seized upon the death of a prisoner, which it attributed to the “culpable negligence” of the jailer and Arnoldi, as a pretext to request that he be dismissed as prison doctor. Relations between Arnoldi and his former allies deteriorated. Beaubien, in a letter written to Louis-Joseph Papineau*, the head of the Patriote party, at the end of 1835, commented on Arnoldi’s appointment as a justice of the peace: “Can we not say that the last administration took on some of those
  Biographie – NISBET, TH...  
Thomas Nisbet se signala sur la scène publique et commerciale de Saint-Jean, mais c’est à titre d’ébéniste qu’on se souvient de lui aujourd’hui. Son entreprise était bien gérée et productive ; ses meubles étaient élégants, ses matériaux de premier choix, ses artisans qualifiés.
Thomas Nisbet was prominent in both the public and the commercial life of Saint John, but it is as a cabinet-maker that he is remembered today. He ran a well-managed and productive furniture business employing stylish designs, excellent materials, and good workmanship. That he had superior ability is illustrated by the labelled pieces which have survived. Among the more important of these are a sofa-table, writing-sewing stand, and sofa at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, card-tables and a writing stand at the New Brunswick Museum in Saint John, a chest of drawers at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery and a chair and drop-leaf table at the York-Sunbury Historical Society Museum, both in Fredericton, and a card-table and desk at Kings Landing Historical Settlement, near Fredericton.
  Biographie – NELLES, RO...  
Bien qu’élevé dans la foi luthérienne au sein de la communauté palatine germanophone de la colonie de New York, Nelles devint un membre important de la congrégation anglicane de Grimsby et contribua à la construction de son église. Son fils Abram* se signala à titre de missionnaire de l’Église d’Angleterre auprès des Indiens des Six-Nations.
After the war he remarried and briefly returned to public life. In February 1814 he had been elected to the assembly for 1st Lincoln and Haldimand to replace the expelled Joseph Willcocks*. He held the seat until 1820; while he attended parliament, his son Henry managed the family mills. This separation has bequeathed to us a rare collection of touching love-letters between husband and wife. Robert Nelles (over the years the spelling gradually regularized to Nelles) was enormously proud of his military record and continued to take a great deal of interest in militia affairs. In 1822 he was rewarded with a promotion to colonel of his regiment. He scandalized and angered his neighbours with the unblushing favouritism of his appointments. For 20 or more years most of the officers in his regiment were members of the Nelles family. This situation aroused jealousy and resentment not only in the county but also within the Nelles family. In 1822 Robert promoted his son-in-law, but his brother William claimed seniority and marred the annual militia parade by beating his rival with a stick.
  Biographie – PETERS, MA...  
Une de ses ambitions était de former une association du même genre au Canada. En 1913, elle signala au National Council of Women que cette idée était très populaire, mais la volonté d’y donner suite mourut avec elle.
Both before and after she and Evelyn sold the family hotel Mabel travelled widely promoting playgrounds. In one year alone, 1912–13, she visited Ottawa, Toronto, Hamilton, London, Walkerville (Windsor), Ont., and Moncton, N.B., and attended the annual meeting of the National Council of Women in Montreal. Her travels in the United States brought her into contact with Jane Addams, a key social activist in Chicago, and with members of the Playground Association of America, of which she was an early member (1907) and a member of the national council (1907–8). In 1908 she served as an honorary vice-president of the association’s congress in New York. One of her ambitions was to form a Canadian association similar in mandate to the PAA. In 1913 she reported to the National Council of Women that there was strong support for the proposal, but the drive behind the idea died with her.
  FR:Biography – WIMAN, E...  
Wiman se signala surtout à l’attention des Canadiens en préconisant, à compter de 1887, une union commerciale avec les États-Unis. Il souhaitait que les deux pays abolissent leurs droits de douane mutuels, élèvent une barrière tarifaire entre eux et le reste du monde et mettent en commun leurs recettes douanières pour les redistribuer en fonction de leur population.
His most prominent Canadian venture was the promotion from 1887 of a commercial union of Canada and the United States. The scheme involved the abolition of tariffs between the two nations, the creation of a common tariff against the rest of the world, and the pooling of the customs revenues of both countries and their distribution on the basis of population. Commercial union was supported in the United States by some prominent businessmen of the protectionist persuasion (among them Samuel J. Ritchie, with whom Wiman shared interests in Canadian resources) and by a few members of Congress from states bordering on Canada. In the dominion the scheme won the backing of farmers’ groups in Ontario, several Liberal papers, and some leading figures in the Liberal party, including Sir Richard John Cartwright* and John Charlton. Thrice defeated in elections on the tariff question, the party was desperately looking for a new trade policy in 1887–88. However, the political implications of commercial union – the thin end of the wedge of annexation – troubled many members. In 1888 the party embraced unrestricted reciprocity, but in 1891 the Conservatives, charging that this policy was treasonous, defeated the Liberals yet again.
  FR:Biography – STROBRID...  
En février 1826, l’ingénieur en chef Francis Hall signala dans son compte rendu aux commissaires du canal que la construction du brise-lames avait déjà coûté à elle seule presque la moitié du montant prévu dans le contrat original pour le projet au complet.
Throughout 1825 dredging machinery was used to dig the cut down to the specified 12 feet. It only remained to complete the two piers and install the decking and handrails. However, disquieting reports were surfacing about Strobridge’s ability to complete the project. The superintendent engineer, Francis Hall, reported to the canal commissioners in February 1826 that the construction of the breakwater alone had already cost nearly one-half the original contract price for the whole project. According to Hall, the breakwater on Lake Ontario faced such strong currents and waves that its construction had proved “hazardous and expensive, beyond all calculations.” Nevertheless, Strobridge had used the weather to his advantage and during the winter of 1825–26 he had had stone hauled across the frozen lake to the work site. Eventually, he overcame the engineering difficulties in constructing the piers and breakwater.
  Biographie – MARLATT, W...  
Le Victoria Daily Times signala que « en s’occupant de questions ouvrières » elle avait « prouvé sa capacité d’organisation pendant l’été des deux dernières années » lorsqu’elle coordonna l'affectation d'ouvrières à la cueillette de fruits sur le continent.
In December 1918 the provincial Department of Labour made plans to open a labour bureau in Victoria. The bureau, one of a province-wide network of employment offices, was a result of a provincial-dominion conference held on 19–23 Nov. 1918; the federal government agreed to pay half of all operating costs of the provincial bureaux. The Victoria office, advertised in local papers as being “at the service of all persons seeking employment and of employers seeking help,” opened in January 1919. It consisted of a male and a female department. The provincial government appointed Marlatt to head the female department on 7 Feb. 1919. The Victoria Daily Times pointed out that “in dealing with labor matters,” she had “proved her organizing ability during the summer of the two last years” when she organized female labourers to pick fruit on the mainland.
  Biographie – MIMIY (Gab...  
La Hudson’s Bay Company reconnaissait Coté comme le principal chef de la région de la rivière du Cygne ; c’est en cette qualité qu’on le signala aux fonctionnaires du gouvernement canadien Alexander Morris, David Laird* et William Joseph Christie* qui, en septembre 1874, se rendirent au fort Qu’Appelle (Fort Qu’Appelle) pour conclure un traité avec les Indiens de la région.
Coté was recognized by the HBC as the principal chief of the Swan River area, and was reported as such to the government officials, Alexander Morris, David Laird*, and William Joseph Christie*, who came to Fort Qu’Appelle to make treaty with the Indians of the area in September 1874. The commissioners subsequently regarded Coté as the principal leader of all the Saulteaux; however, neither the Quill Lakes nor the Qu’Appelle River Saulteaux recognized him as their spokesman or leader, a point they made clear at the council. In fact, these groups distrusted Coté because of his relationship with the HBC and his willingness to cooperate with government officials. At the opening of the treaty negotiations the Qu’Appelle River Saulteaux allegedly threatened Coté’s life and then confined him to his tent in order to make the government aware of their dissatisfaction over the sale in 1870 of Rupert’s Land by the HBC to the Canadian government. They saw this land as belonging to the Indians, and one of their chiefs, Paskwaw, demanded that the money paid to the HBC by the Canadian government be turned over to the Indians. The treaty commissioners explained that the Canadian government recognized the right of the Indians to the land and wanted to make a treaty that would deal justly with their claims. However, the commissioners further explained that the HBC also possessed rights to the land and that the government had to deal as justly with the company as it did with the Indians. The Saulteaux apparently found this answer satisfactory, and Coté was permitted to sign Treaty no.4, but only on behalf of his own band.
  Biographie – REID, JOHN...  
Cependant, pour les élections générales de septembre, Borden avait besoin de Reid, qui accepta avec enthousiasme d’apporter son concours. Trois jours avant le scrutin, ce dernier signala à Borden : « quant à l’est de l’Ontario […] je crois sincèrement que tous ceux que nous avons maintenant sont sûrs ».
Borden, however, needed him for the general election in September, and Reid responded eagerly. Three days before the contest he reported to Borden that “as to Eastern Ontario . . . I honestly believe everyone we now have is safe.” Whereas the Conservatives had won 48 Ontario seats in 1908, they now captured 73, including 20 of the 24 in Reid’s charge, and the Conservatives claimed power. Under pressure from Francis Cochrane*, who had taken over from Albert Edward Kemp as chief organizer for Ontario and was about to become minister of railways and canals, Borden rewarded Reid with the Ministry of Customs, but only after a stern lecture on loyalty. Rich in patronage potential, Customs was the third largest ministry after Railways and Canals and the Post Office. More important, in the days before direct taxation, it was responsible for collecting most of the government’s revenue.
  Biographie – ISBISTER, ...  
, à l’automne de 1745. Joseph signala que son frère « était tombé malade, frappé de délire et d’une sorte de folie [...] et saisi de frayeur ». En réalité, William, par suite de l’abus continuel de l’alcool, avait perdu la raison et menacé de faire sauter Henley avec de la poudre à canon.
The loneliness of the site and the fear of an Indian or French attack on the little garrison may have contributed to William’s attack of delirium tremens in the fall of 1745. Joseph reported that his brother was “taken ill with light-headedness and a sort of frenzy . . . got a fright.” In fact, through continual drinking William had lost his senses and threatened to blow up Henley with gunpowder. His men had overpowered him and brought him handcuffed to Albany, where he talked like a madman all night. When he recovered, Joseph sent him back to Henley.
  Biographie – GARRY, NIC...  
Après la fusion de la Hudson’s Bay Company et de la North West Company, il avait compris que les opérations unifiées de traite devaient être menées avec efficacité et que, pour réussir, il fallait dans une certaine mesure se concilier les anciens membres de la North West Company, sur qui reposait une grande partie des opérations de traite à l’intérieur des terres. Content de l’influence de Garry et de la perspicacité avec laquelle il traitait ces questions, Williams signala en 1821 que « la satisfaction générale, la confiance et l’unanimité » régnaient.
In 1822 Garry became deputy governor of the HBC. His role in the company from this date is obscure, although he does seem to have been interested in trade with Russia and China and in religious affairs. He was still deputy governor in July 1835 when, declared of unsound mind, he was relieved of his functions. He died 21 years later, never having recovered his sanity. During his mission to North America in 1821 Nicholas Garry had proven himself a tactful and humane diplomat. In his handling of the HBC–NWC merger, he had seized upon the company’s need for efficiency in the unified trade and realized that success lay in accommodating to a certain degree the former NWC men who would be counted upon to conduct much of the inland business. Pleased with Garry’s shrewdness and influence in handling these matters, in 1821 Williams reported “universal satisfaction, confidence, and unanimity.” In September Simpson noted that “our old opponents no longer received us as enemies but met us as aquaintances which I think will soon assume the character of Friendship. . . . Mr. Garry’s handsome and impartial conduct acted like Majick in removing all sort of jealousy, he was open and easy of access with the nicest observance of strict honor integrity and impartiality and so different in all these respects from his travelling companion Mr. Simon McGillivray.” The new HBC fort built at the Red River settlement in 1822 was named Fort Garry (Winnipeg) to commemorate Garry’s visit of 1821.
  Biographie – LAVELL, MI...  
Il signala en 1882 « la précision » avec laquelle ce dernier s’acquittait de ses fonctions de même que « l’attention et les soins que re[cevaient] tous ceux qui av[aient] besoin de son assistance professionnelle ».
Lavell earned high praise from James George Moylan who, as inspector of penitentiaries for the federal government, remarked in 1882 on “the exact manner” in which he discharged his duties and on “the care and attention which all receive who require his professional aid.” Moylan also noted that Lavell’s “precautions . . . successfully prevented the inroad of dangerous or infectious diseases.” Lavell credited the success of the penitentiary in avoiding epidemics to the emptying of sewers by convicts and to a program of vaccination. Tuberculosis was a serious cause of death, but in general the death rate at the penitentiary was exceptionally low. In his 1881 report Moylan had noted only two deaths, a suicide and a drowning. He found it remarkable that not a single death had occurred from natural causes. This was remarkable indeed, given the enfeebled condition of many convicts on admission and the physical state of the institution, with its small cage-like cells and poor sewage facilities, circumstances which Lavell found appalling. To promote the health of inmates Lavell emphasized a program of constant vigilance, medical attention, relatively good food and clothing, and a regimen of regular work. He also expressed increasing concern about the growing number of weak-minded and “imbeciles” at the penitentiary.
  Biographie – CABOT, SÉB...  
en y indiquant la latitude par une double gradation. Cabot appuya Gutiérrez et signala de nombreuses erreurs relevées dans la
In these years Sebastian Cabot, as pilot-major, was concerned with the revision of the
  Biographie – FLOQUET, P...  
Avant 1775, au moment où il eut la malchance de se trouver mêlé aux affaires politiques, rien ne le signala spécialement à l’attention du public ; mais, pendant l’occupation de Montréal par les Américains, en 1775–1776, ses rapports plus ou moins fréquents avec eux le compromirent à la fois aux yeux des autorités anglaises et à ceux de Mgr Briand, qui avait fait appel à la loyauté du clergé et du peuple canadien.
In a letter of 15 June 1776 to Bishop Briand, who was threatening to place him under an interdict, Floquet gave an explanation for the actions thought rash: he did not like the Quebec Act and had said so too bluntly; by dealing tactfully with the Bostonnais he thought he could protect his
  Biographie – AUBRY, NIC...  
Vers le 15 juin 1604, Aubry se signala par l’aventure qui lui arriva à la baie Sainte-Marie (N.-É.). Dans une promenade à travers bois avec plusieurs autres, il perdit son épée. Abandonnant le groupe pour aller la chercher, il s’égara et on ne put le retrouver, malgré les recherches des Français et des Indiens.
Champdoré, who had come from Sainte-Croix to fish near Île Longue, noticed him on the shore of the Baie Française (Bay of Fundy), waving his hat and his handkerchief at the end of a pole. The young ecclesiastic had kept himself alive on sorrel and on berries found in the woods. It took him some while to recover from these privations, and he returned to France either in 1604 or in 1605. Nicolas Aubry was still living in 1611, and maintained a keen interest in Canadian affairs.
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