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Topic: 1865 in Canada


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In the News (Sat 14 Nov 09)

  
  CANADA
J.H. Gowan was 47 in the 1901 Census of Canada, Province of Manitoba.
M.E. Gowan was 22 in the 1901 census of Canada, Province of Manitoba.
W.S. Gowan was 27 in the 1901 census of Canada, Province of Manitoba.
bz.llano.net /gowen/manuscript/Gowenms049.htm   (4870 words)

  
 1865 in Canada - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
February 20 - The Legislature of the Canadas passes a motion in favour of Confederation
December 16 - A distinctive Blue Ensign for the province of Canada is authorized by the UK secretary of state for the colonies.
December 22: Colonial Office Circular notifying revised Admiralty requirements for flags for colonial warships and for other colonial government vessels and requesting correct drawings of seals or badges to be adopted as distinguishing marks.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/1865_in_Canada   (196 words)

  
 [ whollyshift.info | 1865 in Canada Resources ]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
February 20 - The Legislature of the Canadas passes a agitation in favour of Confederation March 7 - New Brunswick rejects a Confederation scheme.
December 16 - A distinctive Blue Ensign for the province of Canada is warranted by the UK secretary of fix for the colonies.
December 22: Colonial Office Circular notifying revised Admiralty imperatives for flags for colonial warships 'n for another colonial dominion vessels 'n requesting undistorted drawings of seals or identifications to be adopted as distinguishing marks.
www.whollyshift.info /1865_in_Canada   (251 words)

  
 Canada (1865-1867)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
An admiralty letter to the Colonial Office required colonial warships to 'wear a Union Jack in the usual place, and the White Ensign, with either the Arms of the Colony, or such other distinguishing mark as may be chosen by the Colony, and approved by the Colonial Office and the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty'.
A distinctive Blue Ensign for the province of Canada is authorized by the U.K. secretary of state for the colonies.
The Colonial Office Circular on this matter was dated 22 December 1865, and the corresponding Admiralty Circular was dated 16 January 1866.
www.crwflags.com /fotw/flags/ca-1865.html   (264 words)

  
 1865 in Canada - Encyclopedia, History, Geography and Biography
February 20 - The Legislature of the Canadas passes a motion in favour of Conferderation
This encyclopedia, history, geography and biography article about 1865 in Canada contains research on
1865 in Canada, Events, Births, Deaths, 1865 and Years in Canada.
www.arikah.com /encyclopedia/1865_in_Canada   (215 words)

  
 1865 - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
1865 is a common year starting on Sunday.
1862 1863 1864 - 1865 - 1866 1867 1868
You can find it there under the keyword 1865 (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1865)The list of previous authors is available here: version history (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1865andaction=history).
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/1865   (1292 words)

  
 The Black Abolitionist Papers: Vol. II: Canada, 1830-1865, Edited by C. Peter Ripley. Introduction.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Planters and proslavery advocates cautioned slaves that Canada was a distant, cold, barren, and hostile land inhabited by wild beasts and cannibals.
Canada was the northern terminus of the underground railroad—a historical phenomenon that abolitionists and southern propagandists alike mythologized into a highly complex, secret network that sent agents into the slave states to spirit thousands of bondsmen north to freedom.
Canada proved to be a temporary refuge from southern slavery, slave catchers, legal inequality, and northern racial prejudice.
uncpress.unc.edu /chapters/ripley_black2.html   (16367 words)

  
 Official History in Canada
Canada and the British Army 1846-1871: A Study in the Practice of Responsible Government (London: Longmans, 1936).
The Canadian Government appointed a correspondent in England to "give the public of Canada an account of the performance of Canadian troops" and that this would be done "by means of daily cables." The correspondent was an expatriate Canadian, Sir Max Aitken (better known as Lord Beaverbrook).
Before this could be done, Cruikshank believed that it would be necessary to write an account of military development in Canada prior to the outbreak of war in 1914, and he proceeded to do just that.
www.warchronicle.com /canada/official_history.htm   (5260 words)

  
 Canadians in the U.S. Civil War
Now, I never realized that Canada or rather British North Americans, had anything to do with the Civil War, but the more I find and the more I think about it, I can see many reason's for the participation of Canadians in the war.
Canada was one of the favorite stops on the anti-slavery movements underground railroad.
In those times as now, many Canadians had relatives living in the US and these people as well as their relatives became caught up in the conflict, either as Federal troops fighting for the North, or as Confederate troops fighting for the South.
www.suite101.com /article.cfm/canadas_military/75461   (497 words)

  
 Newfoundland History in the 1860s
The Confederation issue of this period was played out against a background of several years in the early 1860s of economic depression, a depression which led many Newfoundlanders to regard the issue as a viable option to their economic woes.
With an election due in 1865, Premier Hoyles had decided to retire and postponed any discussion of the terms of union until after an election to prevent Confederation from becoming a divisive issue in any forthcoming campaign.
While Carter and Shea were well-known confederates, the basis for the coalition, as noted earlier, was to implement the principle of elite accommodation, or denominational compromise, that all public figures acknowledged would be necessary for sectarian harmony as a result of the political events of 1861.
www.ucs.mun.ca /~melbaker/1860S.htm   (2836 words)

  
 Don't Cry for Canada
Canada, the theory went, was a social democracy with a sane foreign policy and humane values that offered a genuine alternative to the right-wing hegemony that the U.S. was about to experience.
As shorthand for the election results that saw Canada's Conservative party outpoll the governing Liberal Party for the first time since Ronald Reagan served in the White House, those headlines may be useful.
All of Canada's major opposition parties ran anti-corruption campaigns, and the first promise of the Conservatives was not a rightward shift in public policies, but rather the restoration of honest and accountable government.
www.thenation.com /blogs/thebeat?bid=1&pid=53019   (1815 words)

  
 Homeopathy in Canada: A Synopsis
Asa Howard petitioned the legislative Assembly of Upper Canada to recognize Homeopathy (SUC, 1859).
In 1865, "An Act to Regulate the Qualifications of Practitioners in Medicine and Surgery in Upper Canada" was proclaimed (CSUC,1865).
As a consequence of these two acts, the Council of Education and Registration of Upper Canada was established in 1866, with the authority to grant licenses to practice medicine in Upper Canada.
www.homeopathy.edu /historycdn2.htm   (325 words)

  
 Canada Day: The Story Behind the Holiday Part 1
French occupation of Canada was, effectively, at an end.
while America was involved in its Civil War (1861-1865), Canada was involved in a struggle of its own: to come to grips with the idea of forming one, large country.
To add to the confusion, Canada West was also called Upper Canada and Canada East was also called Lower Canada, even though Lower Canada was at times farther north than Upper Canada.
www.socialstudiesforkids.com /articles/holidays/canadaday1.htm   (257 words)

  
 WWW-VL History Index - Canada
Histoire du Canada et de l'Acadie selon Le Jeune
Memoir for the Marquis de Seignelay regarding the Dangers that Threaten Canada and the Means to Remedy Them, January 1687
Canada's Army in Korea: The United Nations Operations, 1950-53, and Their Aftermath
vlib.iue.it /history/CANADA/canada2.html   (864 words)

  
 Belly Tales » Midwifery in Canada   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
Midwifery was criminalized in Canada in 1865, two years before we became a nation.
Canada’s history of residential schools, where Native children were removed from their communities and taught that white culture was superior, has also helped to erode Aboriginal midwifery.
Canada was the last industrialized nation to decriminalize midwifery.
www.studentmidwife.org /2006/03/15/midwifery-in-canada   (1415 words)

  
 1865 in Canada - Term Explanation on IndexSuche.Com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
March_24 - Macdonald, Brown, Cartier, Galt appointed to negotiate Confederation in London.
December_16 - A distinctive Blue_Ensign for the province of Canada is authorized by the U.K. secretary of state for the colonies.
December_22: Colonial Office Circular notifying revised Admiralty requirements for flags for colonial warships and for other colonial government vessels and requesting correct drawings of seals or badges to be adopted as distinguishing marks.
www.indexsuche.com /1865_in_Canada.html   (167 words)

  
 Underground Railroad Refugess in Canada - Index Page
The refugee: or, The narratives of fugitive slaves in Canada.
Anti-slavery Issues in Canada, 1830-1870: A Selective Bibliography: "...a list of materials held by the National Library of Canada and the National Archives of Canada on the anti-slavery movement in Canada between approximately 1830 and 1870."
In 1998 the Foundation sponsored "The Walk to Canada: The Revival:" a three-month journey through ten different states from Alabama to Canada, where Anthony Cohen traced routes of the Underground Railroad to bring attention to its important history.
mcsrt.org /resources/ugrr/index.htm   (1530 words)

  
 rooneys-minnesota.com - Rooney History - Canada to Minnesota
For a short time, between 1865 and 1870, some of the families, such as Rooney, Martin, Darcy, Killeen, and Tracy, lived in the village of St. Anthony Falls, Minnesota, located just north of the present downtown Minneapolis area.
The letters give a glimpse of the difficult life of a Gatineau Valley pioneer family, their concern for their loved ones, and the curiosity and desire to know if life in Minnesota was better or worse than their own.
Most of the Rooneys who left Canada and came to the United States, took advantage of the Homestead Act and settled in Raymond Township in western Stearns County.
www.rooneys-minnesota.com /rooney_history_minnesota.html   (1191 words)

  
 Was There a "Roswell" in 1865?
I was ploughing through a difficult reel featuring newspapers from the Niagara Falls region for 1865, when I came upon the headline, "Remarkable Discovery if True" (displaying a typical nineteenth-century skepticism toward anything that smacked of a tall tale).
Knowing I didn't have the resources to try that, I decided instead to locate all of the remaining reels for 1865 to see if another newspaper had carried the same article.
In 1865, western Canada was a howling wilderness with small settlements on Vancouver Island and in the Red River Valley, but eastern Canada, like the U.S., had a number of well established dailies.
www.think-aboutit.com /ufo/was_there_a_roswell_in_1865.htm   (2109 words)

  
 Immigration Records (1925-1935) - ArchiviaNet - Library and Archives Canada
The National Archives of Canada holds immigration records from 1865 to 1935.
In cooperation with the National Archives of Canada, the Pier 21 Society in Halifax, Nova Scotia, has input the information from the passenger list indexes into this database.
Also included are border entries for individuals whose surname starts with the letter C. Click here to find out how to access earlier and later immigration records.
www.collectionscanada.ca /02/020118_e.html   (116 words)

  
 Canada Provinces
The only Canada update for either of them is that the name of Newfoundland is changed to "Newfoundland and Labrador" ("Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador" in French).
The formal name "Dominion of Canada" was phased out from the 1950s to 1982, in favor of simply "Canada".
Canada is divided into ten provinces and three territories (French: territoires).
www.statoids.com /uca.html   (2157 words)

  
 Elizabeth Abbey
Elizabeth Abbey was born 1845/1846 in Port Hope, Durham Co., Canada West, and died February 17, 1873 in Welcome, Durham Co., Ontario, Canada at age 27.
WELLINGTON ABBEY, a general farmer and stock raiser, residing on section 20, in the town of Byron, was born in Port Hope, Canada, on the 22d day of April, 1840, and is a son of Nathaniel A. and Mary (Neugent) Abbey.
He had escaped death or injury from rebel bullets, but on the 9th of October, 1865, the day on which the regiment was discharged, he died from disease caused by the hardships and exposure incident to army life.
www.leighlarson.com /elizabeth_abbey.htm   (1402 words)

  
 Gough/Goff Emigration to Canada
Between 1869-1928, almost 90,000 'Home Children' children were brought to Canada from Great Britain during the child emigration movement.
It was considered that 'pauper children' would have a better chance for a healthy, moral life in rural Canada, away from the urban slums of the larger industrial cities in England, and they were a source of labour.
Bristol 1850 Goff (14) 1855 Goff (13) 1860 Goff(14) 1865 Goff (14)
www.scit.wlv.ac.uk /%7Ecm1822/canada.htm   (324 words)

  
 Anne Langton: Britain and Canada - 1865-1878
When the permanent Canadian Parliament Buildings were completed in 1865, the family moved to Ottawa, where they remained until John's retirement in 1878.
John and Lydia Langton spent part of 1867 in England when John was required, in his capacity as Auditor, to be in London for negotiations between the Canadian and British governments, leading up to the declaration of Confederation.
John, in Canada, was now Auditor of the provinces of Canada, post-confederation, the Deputy Minister of Finance and Inspector of Her Majesty's prisons in Canada.
www.archives.gov.on.ca /english/exhibits/langton/langton_14.htm   (1033 words)

  
 1865 in science   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
The year 1865 CE in science and technology included many events, some of which are listed here.
See also: 1864 in science, other events of 1865, 1866 in science and the list of years in science.
A strange little sunspot may herald the coming of one of the stormiest solar cycles in decades.
www.serebella.com /encyclopedia/article-1865_in_science.html   (981 words)

  
 Antebellum and Civil War America, 1784-1865: History and Culture
The period from 1784 to 1865 was a time of both expansion and division in the United States.
Despite attempts at compromise, such as the Missouri Compromise of 1820 and the Compromise of 1850, 11 southern states eventually seceded from the Union and formed the Confederate States of America.
In the American Civil War, which lasted from 1861 to 1865, the Confederate Army of the south--seeking its independence--fought against the north's Union Army, which sought to preserve the Union.
www.uncp.edu /home/canada/work/allam/17841865/history/history.htm   (547 words)

  
 LLMC - Collection Description - British Canada
Canada Collection contains legal titles generated in or for the British colonies which became part of modern Canada.
Parting from LLMC practice with most other jurisdictions covered in the Common Law Abroad project, due to the high interest in Canada within the LLMC community, this collection also includes many titles published post-independence.
Riddell - The Bar and Courts of the Province of Upper Canada (1928)
www.llmc.com /clacan.htm   (280 words)

  
 Search Results - Site Search - Library and Archives Canada
These lists constitute the official record of immigration to Canada and are essential for genealogical research in Canada.
These lists consitute the official record of immigration to Canada in that period and are essential for genealogical research in Canada.
This guide is a brief review of records on immigration to Canada in the records of the Department of External Affairs (RG 25).
www.collectionscanada.ca /006/001/006001-110.01-e.php?q%5B0%5D=passenger+lists&x=0&y=0   (375 words)

  
 DRUMM : LEONARD : ROTHWELL : WALKER : Genealogy Query
The sister of James, Ellen married Anna's brother Edward.(Anna's parents did not approve of marriage)James was mugged and killed in May 1877.
Anna opened a boarding house to support their 5 children who were Abraham b.1863 in Ireland, Sarah Jane b.1865 in Canada, James b.1867 in NY, Mary b.1872 in NY, and William E. b.1875 in NY.
Sarah Jane married one of mother's boarders a Charles Drumm b.abt.1858 in Canada.
www.cousinconnect.com /d/a/17583   (247 words)

  
 1865 Silver Dime   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-01)
News, articles, information and resources on 1865 silver dime World Coin Dealer :: 1865 silver dime Resources charcoal-gray 1872-CC dime is rare in all grades coin dollar coin one 1861 dime 1865 $20.00 gold gold 1865 silver dime 1865-s type i $20 liberty Silver Stocks--Comparative Valuations.
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www.coinheavens.com /error-coin/1865-silver-dime.html   (970 words)

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