Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: 1823 in Canada


Related Topics

In the News (Tue 7 Oct 08)

  
  The Atlas of Canada - Pre-Confederation Canada (1740 and 1823)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Each map shows the territorial claims, administrative divisions, and the distribution of population and settlement circa 1740 and 1823.
New France circa 1740 is a temporal cross-section of both New France and British North America in the mid-eighteenth century based on contemporary documents and maps.
British North America circa 1823 is a temporal cross-section of the British North American possessions early in the nineteenth century.
atlas.gc.ca /sites/english/maps/historical/preconfederation/maptopic_view   (92 words)

  
 1823 - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Canada - Rail transport - Science - South Africa - Sport
1823 was a common year starting on Wednesday (see link for calendar).
You can find it there under the keyword 1823 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1823)The list of previous authors is available here: version history (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1823andaction=history).
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/1823   (427 words)

  
 Canada Gazette
The history of the Canada Gazette is interwoven with that of the nation and its forerunners date back to the early years of British rule in Canada.
The Canada Gazette’s status was strengthened and confirmed in 1849 with the passage of An Act to provide for the insertion of certain official and legal notices in the Canada Gazette.
It substituted the Canada Gazette for the Upper Canada Gazette and the Quebec Gazette, both of which were still being published in spite of their diminished status.
canadagazette.gc.ca /book/pg10-e.html   (1169 words)

  
 Ship Arrivals Canada August - November 1823
William Ponden found Guilty at the late Criminal term, of the murder of Agnes M’Kay and who was to have suffered DEATH on Wednesday last, has been respited till Friday next; when the awful sentence of the Law will we understand be carried into execution.
foot states, that that distinguished corps is to embark for Canada in the Spring.
He replied, “I will be intered in Westminster Abbey if I can get a foot of ground;” and that the Dean of Westminster gave sufficient ground (about two foot square) to admit the coffin in a perpendicular position, and a square hole was dug and the corpse admitted head downwards.
www.theshipslist.com /ships/Arrivals/1823c.htm   (4291 words)

  
 The Canada Years
William Latimer Jr., (born 1823, Canada West - died November 12, 1900, Simcoe County, Ontario, Canada, from cancer of the liver).
He married in 1845 to Margaret Ludlow, she was born 1824, County Cavan, Ireland, and died December 1, 1903, from paralysis).
Margaret came to Canada in 1827 (per 1901 Census).
home.earthlink.net /~kimsmith98/id10.html   (326 words)

  
 LAKE FAMILY HISTORY
Her grandparents were educated and instilled in her the importance of being able to read and write.
Her parents and family moved to Ontario, Canada, when she was a child.
Her children partook of her meek and docile, yet lofty and noble nature and when the Gospel came to them in Upper Canada, she with her husband and family were some of the first ones to embrace it.
members.cox.net /jameshistory/p_smith.html   (1346 words)

  
 Canadian History - Books on Scots in Canada
Dunlop, William: Statistical sketches of Upper Canada for the use of emigrants by a backwoodsman (London,1832) [NF.1273.c.7] [3.819(1)]
1823: Emigration to Canada: narrative of a voyage to Quebec, and journey from thence to New Lanark...
Sellar, Gordon: A Scotsman in Upper Canada: the narrative of Gordon Sellar, ed.
www.electricscotland.com /history/canada/scots_books.htm   (389 words)

  
 CanadaInfoLink is everything you wanted to know about Canada and canadian information about provinces, provincial ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Howland held numerous prestigious positions in his lifetime: a minister in the first Dominion cabinet of Canada; the Lieutenant-Governor of Ontario from 1868 to 1873, and Postmaster General of Canada in 1867.
MacDonald was appointed to the Senate of Canada and he remained in the Senate until his death in Ottawa on 21 march 1912.
Mowat was a pioneer of the regulatory and the welfare state in Canada.
www.canadainfolink.ca /confederation.htm   (4091 words)

  
 Descendants of John Sprague
She was born 1812 in Grand Manan Is., New Brunswick, Canada, and died Unknown.
She was born 1820 in Grand Manan Is., New Brunswick, Canada, and died Unknown.
J. She was born 1829 in New Brunswick, Canada, and died Unknown.
www.members.tripod.com /KenCarrico/johnsprague.html   (1115 words)

  
 Emigration From Cork Ireland to Upper Canada, 1823
The "last straw" was the introduction of the Composition Act, 1823 which required the payment of tithes in cash rather than in kind.
The British government asked officials in Upper Canada to send someone to Ireland to conduct an experiment in moving poor people to Upper Canada.
After the successful 1823 experiment, Robinson was sent back to Cork in 1825 to bring back a much larger group to the Newcastle district (around present day Peterborough) These two groups of emigrants from the north Cork area are now referred to as the Peter Robinson settlers.
webhome.idirect.com /~obrienr/cork1823.html   (449 words)

  
 Family of Henry HOOPLE   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
HOOPLE (JURGEN MICHEL) was born about 1760 in Cherry Valley, Otsego, New York, and died in 1838 in Ontario, CANADA.
She was born in 1763 in U.S.A., and died in 1858 in Ontario, CANADA.
She married JOHN J. in 1824 in Osnabruck, Stormont, Ontario, CANADA.
users.ap.net /~lancelot/gen/h47.html   (119 words)

  
 Antique Atlas Canada   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
This informative engraving shows various illustrations from both Hennepin and Lahontain’s travels in Canada, including the famous buffalo and first view of Niagara Falls, along with descriptive text concerning Indian practices and their artefacts around the Great Lakes.
Bulk of Canada named ‘Nouvelle Bretagne, while the name ‘Canada’ is reserved for French speaking region.  Northern boundary of United States with northern bulge into western Canada.
Supposed river connecting interior to the Pacific is shown.  Alaska as ‘Amerique Russe’.  Smith’s Sound shown and suggested to separate Greenland from North America.  Reasonably good understanding of Arctic regions and northern coast of Alaska to present town of Barrow.
www.antique-atlas.co.uk /canada.html   (3789 words)

  
 Social History of Drinking in Canada   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
If you were educated within the last thirty years, you certainly know that early Canadian history is presented in a way that is not merely dull, but dull to the point of interfering with normal brain function.
In the country parts of the province [Ontario], they are in the habit of assembling in parties at the taverns, where they gamble pretty highly, and drink very immoderately, seldom returning home without being completely intoxicated.
In his Forty Years in Canada, Colonel Sam Steele made no secret of his own feelings about the force's uncompromising (albeit hypocritical) mandate: "We had the detestable, prohibitory law to enforce, an insult to free people.
www.canadafirst.net /our_heritage/drink   (4198 words)

  
 North Dakota Movers @ Mover Canada Company
Mover Canada Company offers North Dakota moving and relocation guides and moving tips on every type of moving and relocation services as well as free North Dakota moving estimates from professional movers in North Dakota.
Mover Canada Company is a local North Dakota moving companys directory with local North Dakota movers ready to help you with your local move.
Ironically, many of the colonists near Pembina moved north into Canada when an 1823 boundary survey found them to be residing in the United States.
www.movercanada.com /moving_to_states/north_dakota/north_dakota_moving_companies.htm   (1637 words)

  
 The Peter Robinson Irish Emigrations to Canada (1823 & 1825)
Peter Robinson (only known image of Robinson, left), the son of Loyalists and elder brother of Upper Canada’s powerful Attorney General, John Beverley Robinson, was asked to manage this emigration scheme in 1822.
In 1823 the first wave of Irish settlers (568 people) began the long and dangerous journey to Upper Canada with their final destination in eastern Ontario (the Lanark, Perth, Ramsay township area).
Before the second wave of settlers was to leave for Canada, Robinson traveled to the Peterborough area himself to explore conditions, establish a safe travel route and inspect land.
www.pcma.ca /robinson.htm   (915 words)

  
 UMMZ-Mollusk Division Catalog
Canada: Nova Scotia: Cumberland: Maccan River, Southhampton approx.
Canada: Ontario: : Marion Creek, on Ferguson Highway, N of North Bay approx.
Canada: Ontario: : headwaters of Thomas River at Mitchell approx.
www.liath.com /ummz_geo.php   (10804 words)

  
 Edgar families in Canada
EDGAR was born Abt 1790 in Scotland, and died Abt 1848 in North Fredericksberg Township, Lennox.
He married CATHERINE SMITH Abt 1814 in N. Fredericksberg (Camden East), Ontario Canada.
) was born 1830 in North Fredericksberg, Canada West, and died in ?.
www.geocities.com /edgarwebsites/canada.htm   (813 words)

  
 Canada and Canadian Marriage Records
Some of their children were born in Newcastle N.B., Canada, Manchester, NH and the rest were born in Brewer, Maine.
My grandmother married my grandfather in the early 1920's I never did see my grandfather because he died when my mother was around nine or ten years old and she was born in 1926 so I hope this information is helpful to you.
Immigrated to Canada approximately 1902, married, had two daughters.
www.genwed.com /canada.htm   (401 words)

  
 Thomson Nelson - Secondary Social Studies - Canadian History: Patterns and Transformations
Canada 1823 — Natural Resources Canada The Atlas of Canada — Government of Canada
A history of the Mennonites in North America and Canada.
A short article from the Department of National Defence's journal on the history of the militia of Canada and its relations with the regular army.
www.nelson.com /nelson/school/secondary/socialstudies/077252940X/studweblinks_04.html   (389 words)

  
 Checklist of Newspapers... Library and Archives Canada   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Kingston 1825; Upper Canada Gazette and U.E. Loyalist.
Canada; Early French Map of New France and New England; Graduates and Scholars 2001-2002, Brockville Collegiate Institute; St. Mary Catholic High School; South Grenville District High School; Thousand Islands Secondary School -- 1895733812.
Microfilm of the Burlington gazette is available from 1986 on microfilm and from 1985 to S 2, 1986 on microfiche at Library and Archives Canada and from 1899 to date (some issues missing) at Burlington Public Library.
www.collectionscanada.ca /8/12/r12-1056-e.html   (6549 words)

  
 Upper Canada Genealogy - Website Links and Reviews
This website is loaded with free Upper Canada data from across the province.
All of the articles are excellent, but the most helpful for Upper Canada researchers may be the section on Loyalists which includes detailed accounts of loyalist history and records, and several militia regiment rolls for 1790.
Most of the information is for the post-Upper Canada period, but there are several useful lists and texts for this period as well.
www.uppercanadagenealogy.com /links.html   (893 words)

  
 Ship Arrivals Canada June - August 1823
Steam-boat Accident.–Yesterday morning, as the Steam-boat New Swiftsure was leaving port for Quebec, a trifling accident in her machinery caused her to put back for a few hours for the purpose of being repaired.
We may safely calculate, that each person will bring 200, Dollars, which will add to the capital of Ohio for 1823 the sum of 2000,000, Dollars and for each succeeding year the sum of 600,000; and as industrious good men are more valuable than money, we may double these sums in behalf of this state.
We some time ago mentioned a report that a plan was in agitation in England for promoting emigration to Upper Canada, upon a large scale.
www.theshipslist.com /ships/Arrivals/1823b.htm   (4553 words)

  
 Upper Canada Rebellion 1837: The End
At Kingston he was Postmaster, Magistrate and from 1823 to 1836 agent for the Bank of Upper Canada.
He used to tell us often, in writing, not to be downcast; that he belived "Canada would yet be free"; that we were "contending in a good cause." He said he was not sorry for what he had done, and that "he would do so again." This was his mind until death.
LOUNT and MATTHEWS, two of the bravest of the Canada patriots, were executed this day, by order of Sir George Arthur, and at the urgent request of Chief Justice Robinson; Hagerman the Attorney General; and Sullivan, Baldwin, Elmsley, Allan and Draper, the Executive Council.
www.sg-chem.net /UC1838   (4508 words)

  
 Louis Tardif & Sophie Bossé
Louis TARDIF was born about 1823 in Canada.
Listed as Louis Tardiffe, age 57, farmer, couldn't read or write, born in Canada, living with wife Sophia and sons Louis (age 25), Simeion (23), Paulette (17), Xavier (12), and Bellonie (6).
Listed as Sophia Tardiffe, age 51, "keeping house", couldn't read or write, born in Canada, living with husband Louis and sons Louis, Simeion, Paulette, Xavier and Bellonie.
www.upperstjohn.com /nellie/d321.htm   (343 words)

  
 North America Canada Ontario Society and Culture Genealogy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The C. Robert Craig Memorial Library - Documenting the history of rail transportation in Canada, with an emphasis on eastern Ontario.
Emigration From Cork Ireland to Upper Canada, 1823 - The first Peter Robinson settlers from north Cork Ireland to the Bathurst District Upper Canada in 1823.
Irish and Huron Tract Ontario Canada - Provides a databases of names events and places, Church records for the Huron and Perth areas, census for McKillop Township and places of origin in Ireland.
www.iper1.com /iper1-odp/scat/id/Regional/North_America/Canada/Ontario/Society_and_Culture/Genealogy   (782 words)

  
 Family of David RANSOM, Sr.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
was born in 1789 in Vermont, and died in 1872 in Ontario, CANADA.
He married SARAH HOOPLE about 1823 in Ontario?, CANADA, daughter of HENRY HOOPLE and MARY WHITMORE.
She was born in 1799 in Ontario, CANADA, and died in 1886 in Ontario?, CANADA.
users.ap.net /~lancelot/gen/h84.html   (88 words)

  
 Gariel Rocquebrune, b: 1823 - Rigaud, Canada   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Born: 4 NOV 1823 - Rigaud, Québec, Canada Marr: 1873 - Died: BEF 20 MAY 1913 - Québec, Canada Father: Jean Noël Larocquebrune (Rocbrune) Mother: Marie Josephte "surnommée" Albert Other Spouses:
Born: 7 OCT 1825 - Rigaud, Québec, Canada Marr: 1845 - Died: 24 AUG 1854 - Bytown (Ottawa), Ontario, Canada Father: Jean Noël Larocquebrune (Rocbrune) Mother: Marie Josephte "surnommée" Albert Other Spouses:
Born: 21 SEP 1828 - Rigaud, Québec, Canada Marr: 1849 - Died: - Father: Jean Noël Larocquebrune (Rocbrune) Mother: Marie Josephte "surnommée" Albert Other Spouses:
www3.sympatico.ca /gerry.bourguignon/gedhtree/gp2175.html   (224 words)

  
 Potvin Genealogy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
The records found so far for this family are the Ontario Censuses of 1871, 1881, and 1891.
Hyacinth and his son Hyacinth are listed in the 1880/1881 Essex and Kent County Historical Atlas as farmers in Tilbury West.
James Ackerson on 20 Jul. 1877 at St. Francis Xavier, Tilbury West Twp., Essex, Ontario, Canada After divorcing James, she married John Kittle.
members.cox.net /sawimme/potvin.htm   (374 words)

  
 CanadaSoccer.com | Official Site of the Canadian Soccer Association   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Canada set to play in CONCACAF Beach Soccer Championship
Canada wins 1-0 against Jamaica in front of an animated crowd
Canada triumphs over France 1-0 in International Friendly
www.canadasoccer.com /eng/media/viewArtical.asp?Press_ID=1823   (224 words)

  
 Marie Gibeau dit Sayer, b: 1823 - Rigaud, Canada   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Born: ABT 1823 - Rigaud, Québec, Canada Died: 13 JUL 1886 - Ottawa, Ontario, Canada Father: Étienne Gibeau Mother: Marie Sureau dit Blondin Other Spouses: Joseph Périllard dit Bourguignon
Born: 27 JUN 1736 - Pointe-Claire, Québec, Canada Marr: 1762
Born: 13 JUL 1748 - Pointe-Claire, Québec, Canada Marr: 1768
www3.sympatico.ca /gerry.bourguignon/gedhtree/gp210.html   (559 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-21)
Canada Tree Volume 3 Issue 4 April 1996©
Nicholas' mother is given as Sally Hands, born about 1728, died about 1823 in Ontario, Canada.
Elizabeth would have been sixteen when the next child, Elizabeth Maria, was born in 1806 in Canada.
users.rttinc.com /~canadatree/newslett/news34.htm   (2008 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.