ONTARIO (Canada) Pagina 1 Di 3 ONTARIO Denominato Dal Lago Ontario, Che Prese Il Suo Nome Da Un Linguaggio Nativo Americano

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

ONTARIO (Canada) Pagina 1 Di 3 ONTARIO Denominato Dal Lago Ontario, Che Prese Il Suo Nome Da Un Linguaggio Nativo Americano ONTARIO (Canada) ONTARIO Denominato dal Lago Ontario, che prese il suo nome da un linguaggio nativo americano, derivante da onitariio=lago bellissimo, oppure kanadario=bellissimo, oppure ancora dall’urone ontare=lago. A FRANCIA 1604-1763 A GB 1763-1867 - Parte del Quebec 1763-1791 - Come Upper Canada=Canada Superiore=Alto Canada 24/08/1791-23/07/1840 (effettivamente dal 26/12/1791) - Come Canada Ovest=West Canada 23/07/1840-01/07/1867 (effettivo dal 5/02/1841) (unito al Canada Est nella PROVINCIA DEL CANADA) - Garantito Responsabilità di Governo 11/03/1848-1867 PROVINCIA 1/07/1867- Luogotenenti-Governatori GB 08/07/1792-10/04/1796 John GRAVES SIMCOE (1752+1806) 20/07/1796-17/08/1799 Peter RUSSELL (f.f.)(1733+1808) 17/08/1799-11/09/1805 Peter HUNTER (1746+1805) 11/09/1805-25/08/1806 Alexander GRANT (f.f.)(1734+1813) 25/08/1806-09/10/1811 Francis GORE (1°)(1769+1852) 09/10/1811-13/10/1812 Sir Isaac BROCK (f.f.)(1769+1812) 13/10/1812-19/06/1813 Sir Roger HALE SHEAFFE (f.f.)(1763+1851) 19/06/1813-13/12/1813 Francis DE ROTTENBURG, BARON DE ROTTENBURG (f.f.) (1757+1832) 13/12/1813-25/04/1815 Sir Gordon DRUMMOND (f.f.)(1771+1854) 25/04/1815-01/07/1815 Sir George MURRAY (Provvisorio)(1772-1846) 01/07/1815-21/09/1815 Sir Frederick PHILIPSE ROBINSON (Provvisorio)(1763+1852) 21/09/1815-06/01/1817 Francis GORE (2°) 11/06/1817-13/08/1818 Samuel SMITH (f.f.)(1756+1826) 13/08/1818-23/08/1828 Sir Peregrine MAITLAND (1777+1854) 04/11/1828-26/01/1836 Sir John COLBORNE (1778+1863) 26/01/1836-23/03/1838 Sir Francis BOND HEAD (1793+1875) 05/12/1837-07/12/1837 William LYON MACKENZIE (in ribellione) 23/03/1838-05/02/1841 Sir George ARTHUR (1784+1854) Come CANADA 1841-1867 Governatori 01/07/1867-14/07/1868 Henry William STISTED (1817+1875) 15/07/1868-11/11/1873 William PEARCE HOWLAND (1811+1907) 12/11/1873-13/05/1875 John WILLOUGHBY CRAWFORD (1817+1875) 18/05/1875-30/06/1880 Donald Alexander MACDONALD (1817+1896) 01/07/1880-31/05/1887 John Beverley ROBINSON (1821+1896) 01/06/1887-24/05/1892 Sir Alexander CAMPBELL (1822+1892) 30/05/1892-07/11/1896 Sir George AIREY KIRKPATRICK (1841+1899) 07/11/1896-18/11/1897 Sir Casimir Stanislaus GZOWSKI (f.f.)(1813+1898) 18/11/1897-19/04/1903 Sir Oliver MOWAT (1820+1903) 21/04/1903-21/09/1908 Sir William Mortimer CLARK (1836+1917) Pagina 1 di 3 ONTARIO (Canada) 22/09/1908-26/09/1914 Sir John MORRISON GIBBON (Sir, dal 1912)(1842+1929) 02/10/1914-20/11/1919 Sir John STRATHEARN HENDRIE (Sir, dal 1915)(1857+1923) 01/12/1919-29/08/1921 Lionel Herbert CLARKE (1859+1921) 10/09/1921-12/01/1927 Henry COCKSHUTT (1868+1944) 12/01/1927-25/10/1931 William Donald ROSS (1869+1947) 25/10/1931-01/11/1932 Sir William MULOCK (f.f.)(1844+1944) 01/11/1932-23/11/1937 Herbert Alexander BRUCE (1868+1963) 23/11/1937-26/12/1946 Albert Edward MATTHEWS (1873+1949) 26/12/1946-18/02/1952 Ray LAWSON (1886+1980) 18/02/1952-30/12/1957 Louis Orville BREITHAUPT (1890+1960) 30/12/1957-01/05/1963 John KEILLER MACKAY (1888+1970) 01/05/1963-04/07/1968 William Earl ROWE (1886+1984) 04/07/1968-10/04/1974 William ROSS MACDONALD (1881+1976) 10/04/1974-15/09/1980 Pauline MILLS MCGIBBON (femm.)(1910+2001) 15/09/1980-20/09/1985 John BLACK AIRD (1923+1995) 20/09/1985-11/12/1991 Lincoln ALEXANDER (*1922) 11/12/1991-24/01/1997 Henry N.R. JACKMAN (*1932) 24/01/1997-07/03/2002 Hilary M. WESTON (femm.)(*1942) 07/03/2002- James K. BARTLEMAN (*1939) Capi del Consiglio Speciale 18/04/1838-01/06/1838 James CUTHBERT 05/11/1838-11/11/1839 Toussaint POTHIER 11/11/1839-28/01/1841 James STUART 28/01/1841-10/02/1841 George MOFFAT Premier 01/07/1867-15/07/1867 John Alexander MACDONALD (interim)(1815+1891) 16/07/1867-20/12/1871 John Ssandfield MACDONALD (1812+1872) 20/12/1871-25/10/1872 Edward BLAKE (1833+1912) 25/10/1872-25/07/1896 Sir Oliver MOWAT (1820+1903) 25/07/1896-21/10/1899 Arthur STURGIS HARDY (1837+1901) 21/10/1899-08/02/1905 George William ROSS (1841+1914) 08/02/1905-15/09/1914 Sir James Pliny WHITNEY (1843+1914) 02/10/1914-14/11/1919 Sir William Howard HEARST (1864+1941) 14/11/1919-16/07/1923 Ernest Charles DRURY (1878+1968) 16/07/1923-15/12/1930 George Howard FERGUSON (1870+1946) 15/12/1930-10/07/1934 George STEWART HENRY (1871+1958) 10/07/1934-21/10/1942 Mitchell Frederick HEPBURN (1886+1953) 21/10/1942-18/05/1943 Gordon Daniel CONANT (1885+1953) 18/05/1943-17/08/1943 Harry Corwin NIKON (1891+1962) 17/08/1943-19/10/1948 George Alexander DREW (1894+1973) 19/10/1948-04/05/1949 Thomas LAIRD KENNEDY (1878+1960) 04/05/1949-08/11/1961 Leslie MISCAMPBELL FROST (1895+1973) 08/11/1961-01/03/1971 John PARMENTER ROBARTS (1917+1982) 01/03/1971-08/02/1985 William DAVIS (*1929) 08/02/1985-26/06/1985 Frank MILLER (1927+2000) 26/06/1985-01/10/1990 David PETERSON (*1943) 01/10/1990-26/06/1995 Bob RAE (*1948) 26/06/1995-15/04/2002 Mike HARRIS (*1945) 15/04/2002-23/10/2003 Ernie EVES (*1946) Pagina 2 di 3 ONTARIO (Canada) 23/10/2003- Dalton MCGUINTY (*1955) Vds. CANADA Pagina 3 di 3 .
Recommended publications
  • Six Nations Women Teachers at Grand River in the Early Twentieth Century Alison Norman
    Document generated on 09/24/2021 6:07 a.m. Ontario History “True to my own noble race” Six Nations Women Teachers at Grand River in the early Twentieth Century Alison Norman Women and Education Article abstract Volume 107, Number 1, Spring 2015 While classrooms for Indigenous children across Canada were often taught by non-Indigenous men and women, at the Six Nations of Grand River, numerous URI: https://id.erudit.org/iderudit/1050677ar Haudenosaunee women worked as teachers in the day schools and the DOI: https://doi.org/10.7202/1050677ar residential school on the reserve. While very different from each other, Emily General, Julia Jamieson and Susan Hardie shared a passion for educating the See table of contents young of their community, especially about Haudenosaunee culture and history, along with the provincial curriculum. They were community leaders, role models and activists with diverse goals, but they all served their community through teaching, and had a positive impact on the children they Publisher(s) taught. The Ontario Historical Society ISSN 0030-2953 (print) 2371-4654 (digital) Explore this journal Cite this article Norman, A. (2015). “True to my own noble race”: Six Nations Women Teachers at Grand River in the early Twentieth Century. Ontario History, 107(1), 5–34. https://doi.org/10.7202/1050677ar Copyright © The Ontario Historical Society, 2015 This document is protected by copyright law. Use of the services of Érudit (including reproduction) is subject to its terms and conditions, which can be viewed online. https://apropos.erudit.org/en/users/policy-on-use/ This article is disseminated and preserved by Érudit.
    [Show full text]
  • Fort Niagara Flag Is Crown Jewel of Area's Rich History
    Winter 2009 Fort Niagara TIMELINE The War of 1812 Ft. Niagara Flag The War of 1812 Photo courtesy of Angel Art, Ltd. Lewiston Flag is Crown Ft. Niagara Flag History Jewel of Area’s June 1809: Ft. Niagara receives a new flag Mysteries that conforms with the 1795 Congressional act that provides for 15 starts and 15 stripes Rich History -- one for each state. It is not known There is a huge U.S. flag on display where or when it was constructed. (There were actually 17 states in 1809.) at the new Fort Niagara Visitor’s Center that is one of the most valued historical artifacts in the December 19, 1813: British troops cap- nation. The War of 1812 Ft. Niagara flag is one of only 20 ture the flag during a battle of the War of known surviving examples of the “Stars and Stripes” that were 1812 and take it to Quebec. produced prior to 1815. It is the earliest extant flag to have flown in Western New York, and the second oldest to have May 18, 1814: The flag is sent to London to be “laid at the feet of His Royal High- flown in New York State. ness the Prince Regent.” Later, the flag Delivered to Fort Niagara in 1809, the flag is older than the was given as a souvenir to Sir Gordon Star Spangled Banner which flew over Ft. McHenry in Balti- Drummond, commander of the British more. forces in Ontario. Drummond put it in his As seen in its display case, it dwarfs home, Megginch Castle in Scotland.
    [Show full text]
  • The Humber River Heritage Bridge Inventory
    CROSSINGTHE H UMBER T HE HE 2011 Heritage H UMBER UMBER Canada Foundation NATIONAL ACHIEVEMENT R AWARD WINNER IVER IVER for Volunteer Contribution HERIT A GE B RIDGE RIDGE I NVENTORY July 2011 CROSSING THE HUMBER THE HUMBER RIVER HERITAGE BRIDGE INVENTORY www.trca.on.ca Toronto and Region Conservation Authority Humber Watershed Alliance, Heritage Subcommittee Newly Released, July 2011 Fold Here PREAMBLE In 2008, I was introduced to the Humber River Heritage Bridge Inventory to provide advice on one of the identified heritage bridges, slated for de-designation and subsequent demolition. Having recently recommended to the Canadian Society for Civil Engineering that they increase their activities in heritage bridge conservation, I was happy to participate in this inventory project as such initiatives highlight the significant and often overlooked relationship between engineering advancements and our cultural heritage. Over time the widespread loss of heritage bridges has occurred for a variety of reasons: deterioration, changes in highway requirements, or damage by storms like Hurricane Hazel. Today, however, with increasing attention towards cultural heritage, creative solutions are being explored for preserving heritage bridges. Protecting, conserving and celebrating our heritage bridges contributes to not only a greater understanding of the development of approaches to modern day engineering but also marks our progress as a nation, from early settlement to today’s modern and progressive communities. Roger Dorton, C.M., Ph.D., P.Eng. 1
    [Show full text]
  • 12 01 Ganddhs Newsletter
    October 02, 2019 Page 1 of 15 Sheila Mccahon From: Historical Society Glencoe <[email protected]> Sent: September 18, 2019 6:55 PM To: Sheila Mccahon Subject: Glencoe & District Historical Society - Fall Newsletter 1 October 02, 2019 Page 2 of 15 Glencoe & District Historical Society Fall 2019 Newsletter 2 October 02, 2019 Page 3 of 15 G & DHS Executive Committee President - Ken Beecroft Vice President - JoAnn Galbraith Past President - Lorne Munro Treasurer - Marilyn McCallum Secretary - Mary Simpson Director - Harold Carruthers Director - Ina Nelms Director - Ken Willis Director - Dennis Harmsworth Well.... here it is September already. I don't know about you, but I found that the summer went by extremely quickly, maybe because of the damp and cool weather. At any rate, no doubt you've all been busy. Here at Glencoe & District Historical Society, we've been busy also. Since our big move to the Archives last Fall, we realize that there's more that we can and should be doing in the way of policy and procedural development, along with better identifying and tracking of our assets, especially books, documents and artifacts. To that end, we've established a committee of volunteers who will work on these goals.... More on that to come. With regret, I must let you know that G & DHS has lost another past Executive member. Karen Kendrick-Diamond passed away September 11th after a long and courageous battle with cancer. Karen was a life long resident of Glencoe and worked in the past at the Glencoe Library. Her 3 October 02, 2019 Page 4 of 15 Service of Remembrance will be September 26th at Van Heck Funeral Home in Glencoe.
    [Show full text]
  • The Ojibwa: 1640-1840
    THE OJIBWA: 1640-1840 TWO CENTURIES OF CHANGE FROM SAULT STE. MARIE TO COLDWATER/NARROWS by JAMES RALPH HANDY A thesis presented to the University of Waterloo in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts P.JM'0m' Of. TRF\N£ }T:·mf.RRLAO -~ in Histor;y UN1V"RS1TY O " · Waterloo, Ontario, 1978 {§) James Ralph Handy, 1978 I hereby declare that I am the sole author of this thesis. I authorize the University of Waterloo to lend this thesis to other institutions or individuals for the purpose of scholarly research. I further authorize the University of Waterloo to reproduce this thesis by photocopying or by other means, in total or in part, at the request of other institutions or individuals for the pur­ pose of scholarly research. 0/· (ii) The University of Waterloo requires the signature of all persons using or photo­ copying this thesis. Please sign below, and give address and date. (iii) TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE 1) Title Page (i) 2) Author's Declaration (11) 3) Borrower's Page (iii) Table of Contents (iv) Introduction 1 The Ojibwa Before the Fur Trade 8 - Saulteur 10 - growth of cultural affiliation 12 - the individual 15 Hurons 20 - fur trade 23 - Iroquois competition 25 - dispersal 26 The Fur Trade Survives: Ojibwa Expansion 29 - western villages JO - totems 33 - Midiwewin 34 - dispersal to villages 36 Ojibwa Expansion Into the Southern Great Lakes Region 40 - Iroquois decline 41 - fur trade 42 - alcohol (iv) TABLE OF CONTENTS (Cont'd) Ojibwa Expansion (Cont'd) - dependence 46 10) The British Trade in Southern
    [Show full text]
  • DRAFT Five Principles Open Letter
    c/o Mennonite Central Committee Ontario The Honourable Deb Matthews, MPP 50 Kent Ave. Minister of Health Kitchener, ON N2G 3R1 10th Floor, Hepburn Block 80 Grosvenor Street Toronto, Ontario M7A 2C4 March 25, 2010 Dear Minister Matthews, The decision the McGuinty government has taken to end the Special Diet Allowance for people on Ontario Works and the Ontario Disability Support Program has been interpreted as a disturbing signal about the degree to which government is committed to the goals of poverty reduction and the importance of protecting the human rights of people with disabilities. However, it also presents you with the opportunity to create a new program that will address the acknowledged shortcomings of the Special Diet Allowance program, while ensuring continuation of the important financial support it provides to people with documented health challenges. In light of the government's announcement that the Ministry of Health will be creating a replacement program for the Special Diet Allowance, we are writing to forward our proposal for Five Principles that should form the basis for this new program. The 25 in 5 Network and its partners, the ODSP Action Coalition and the Registered Nurses’ Association of Ontario (RNAO), are circulating the enclosed Five Principles document to other partner organizations, individuals, and supporters. We trust that you will hear from many around the province who also believe that the new program must be based on these principles. Statements about the scope and mandate of the new program have been made by members of government that have led many to fear that people currently receiving Special Diet will no longer be adequately supported by our government.
    [Show full text]
  • A Tribute to Bill Davis and TVO
    Bil 65, passed on May 10, 2000 during te 37t Session, founded te Ontario Associaton of Former" Parliamentarians. It was te first bil in Ontario histry t be intoduced by a Legislatve Commitee. Editorial: David Warner (Chair), Lily Oddie Munro, Joe Spina and Alexa Hu$man We now have more members than ever before. Welcome to the following 16 MPPs who are now "members of O.A.F.P. 1. Shirley Collins 2. Aileen Carroll 3. Charles Godfrey 4. Marietta Roberts 5. Robert McKessock 6. Elizabeth Witmer 7. Margaret Birch 8. Don Cousens 9. Sophia Aggelonitis 10. Ernie Parsons 11. Carol Mitchell 12. Steve Mahoney 13. Rick Ferraro 14. Greg Sorbara 15. Alan Eagleson Premier Bill Davis speaking at the ceremony for the" 16. Rev. William Herman donation of the J.C.B. and E.C. Horwood Collection to the Ferrier Archives of Ontario 1979 " " A Tribute to Bill Davis and TVO TVO hosted a special Bill Davis tribute on Wednesday, November 6, 2013. The "Gala event was hosted by the Fermenting Cellar of the Distillery District." Bill Davis was the 18th Premier of Ontario, from 1971-1985. Davis was first elected as an MPP in the 1959 provincial election. Under John Robarts, he was "the cabinet minister, overseeing the education portfolio. " He succeeded Robarts as premier. After retiring, Davis was made a Companion of the Order of Canada in 1985. He has served on numerous corporate boards and "played a role in creating the Conservative Party of Canada. " Please visit TVO’s website for more information. PAGE !1 Bil 65, passed on May 10, 2000 during te 37t Session, founded te Ontario Associaton of Former" Parliamentarians.
    [Show full text]
  • Austerity, Competitiveness and Neoliberalism Redux Ontario Responds to the Great Recession
    CORE Metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk Provided by Socialist Studies (E-Journal) / Études Socialistes Socialist Studies / Études socialistes 7(1/2) Spring/Fall 2011: 141‐170 Copyright © 2011 The Author(s) SPECIAL ISSUE ON ORGANIZING FOR AUSTERITY: THE NEOLIBERAL STATE, REGULATING LABOUR AND WORKING CLASS RESISTANCE Austerity, Competitiveness and Neoliberalism Redux Ontario Responds to the Great Recession CARLO FANELLI and MARK P. THOMAS Sociology & Anthropology, Carleton University. Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Sociology, York University. Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Abstract This article examines the deepening integration of market imperatives throughout the province of Ontario. We do this by, first, examining neoliberalism’s theoretical underpinnings, second, reviewing Ontario’s historical context, and third, scrutinizing the Open Ontario Plan, with a focus on proposed changes to employment standards legislation. We argue that contrary to claims of shared restraint and the pressing need for public austerity, Premier McGuinty’s Liberal’s have re‐branded and re‐packaged core neoliberal policies in such a manner that costs are socialized and profits privatized, thereby intensifying class polarization along with its racialized and gendered diversities. Résumé Cet article analyse l’intégration de plus en plus profonde des impératifs du marché dans la province de l’Ontario. Nous faisons cette analyse, premièrement, en analysant les bases théoriques du néolibéralisme, deuxièmement, en décrivant le contexte historique de l’Ontario, et troisièmement, en examinant le “Open Ontario Plan”, sous l’angle particulier des propositions de changement de la législation sur le droit du Carlo Fanelli is a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology & Anthropology at Carleton University.
    [Show full text]
  • 10-2 157410 Volumes 1-7 Open FA 10-2
    10-2_157410_volumes_1-7_open FA 10-2 RG Volume Reel no. Title / Titre Dates no. / No. / No. de de bobine volume RG10-A-1-a 1 10996 Copy made of a surrender from the Six Nations to Caleb Benton, John Livingston and 1796-05-27 Associates, entered into 9 July 1788 RG10-A-1-a 1 10996 Copy made of a surrender from the Six Nations to Caleb Benton, John Livingston and 1796-08-31 Associates, entered into 9 July 1788 RG10-A-1-a 1 10996 Copy made of a surrender from the Six Nations to Caleb Benton, John Livingston and 1796-11-17 Associates, entered into 9 July 1788 RG10-A-1-a 1 10996 Copy made of a surrender from the Six Nations to Caleb Benton, John Livingston and 1796-12-28 Associates, entered into 9 July 1788 RG10-A-1-a 1 10996 William Dummer Powell to Peter Russell respecting Joseph Brant 1797-01-05 RG10-A-1-a 1 10996 Robert Prescott to Peter Russell respecting the Indian Department - Enclosed: Copy of Duke of 1797-04-26 Portland to Prescott, 13 December 1796, stating that the Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada will head the Indian Department, but that the Department will continue to be paid from the military chest - Enclosed: Copy of additional instructions to Lieutenant Governor U.C., 15 December 1796, respecting the Indian Department - Enclosed: Extract, Duke of Portland to Prescott, 13 December 1796, respecting Indian Department in U.C. RG10-A-1-a 1 10996 Robert Prescott to Peter Russell sending a copy of Robert Liston's letter - Enclosed: Copy, 1797-05-18 Robert Liston to Prescott, 22 April 1797, respecting the frontier posts RG10-A-1-a
    [Show full text]
  • Toronto Has No History!’
    ‘TORONTO HAS NO HISTORY!’ INDIGENEITY, SETTLER COLONIALISM AND HISTORICAL MEMORY IN CANADA’S LARGEST CITY By Victoria Jane Freeman A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of History University of Toronto ©Copyright by Victoria Jane Freeman 2010 ABSTRACT ‘TORONTO HAS NO HISTORY!’ ABSTRACT ‘TORONTO HAS NO HISTORY!’ INDIGENEITY, SETTLER COLONIALISM AND HISTORICAL MEMORY IN CANADA’S LARGEST CITY Doctor of Philosophy 2010 Victoria Jane Freeman Graduate Department of History University of Toronto The Indigenous past is largely absent from settler representations of the history of the city of Toronto, Canada. Nineteenth and twentieth century historical chroniclers often downplayed the historic presence of the Mississaugas and their Indigenous predecessors by drawing on doctrines of terra nullius , ignoring the significance of the Toronto Purchase, and changing the city’s foundational story from the establishment of York in 1793 to the incorporation of the City of Toronto in 1834. These chroniclers usually assumed that “real Indians” and urban life were inimical. Often their representations implied that local Indigenous peoples had no significant history and thus the region had little or no history before the arrival of Europeans. Alternatively, narratives of ethical settler indigenization positioned the Indigenous past as the uncivilized starting point in a monological European theory of historical development. i i iii In many civic discourses, the city stood in for the nation as a symbol of its future, and national history stood in for the region’s local history. The national replaced ‘the Indigenous’ in an ideological process that peaked between the 1880s and the 1930s.
    [Show full text]
  • Winter Newsletter
    Volume VI]] No. 4 Brant Historical Society 2001 ISSN 1201-4028 Winter. 2001 i°ehJ:b¥rysa:tf'tR:e#[f:; #::rBrant Historical Society, looks at one of the 2o Photo by Brian Thompson, courtesy Of The Expositor The Brant Historical Society's Wall of Honour stillwishedtofinishthewall. ByRuthLefler He contacted Ralph Cook, a member of the Museum Committee, to do the job. Ralph begantheprojectbutunfortunatelydied. Lastyeartheprojectwasonceagainrevived when Glenn contacted me. I took the plan to contributions. theboardand,withitsblessing,proceeded. The following criteria were established. Thepersonschosenhadtobe: Continued on Page 2 --Giantsintheirownright; -- Outstanding in one field in any two of the following areas - local, provincial, David Glenn Kilmer federal or intemational; L (1914- ) -- Residents at one time of Brantford or A retired high school BrantcountyorsikNations. principal and co- At this time, Glenn was chairman of the founder Of Westfteld Heritage Village, Museum Committee of the Brant Historical Glenn Kilmer initiated Society. He and his committee proceeded to and provided funding choose persons to match the criteria. A list for the Brant was formalized, biographies were written and Historical Society's edited. Before the project was completed, WallofHonour. Glenn left the Society's board of directors but Celebrating 93 years of preserving local history Page 2 B.H.S. Quarterly -Winter, 2ool B.H.S. Quarterly -Winter, 2ool Page 3 TheBrantHistoricalSociety'sWallof Honour Continued from Page 1 Alexander Graham Bell •#ifeS(#, ,qu T**::, , Glenn sent me the list of names offered to (1847-1922) Hiram "rang" Capron (1796-1872) edit the information and provided funding A teacher of the deaf, Alexander President's Reflections for the project.
    [Show full text]
  • OHS Bulletin May 2013 Executive Director’S Report
    OHS B ULLETIN THE NEWSLETTER OF THE ONTARIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY I ss UE 187 M AY 2013 Peterborough’s Hutchinson House Celebrates 175 Years Saturday, June 22, 2013 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation R.R. 6, Hagersville, Ontario The 125th Annual General Meeting and Honours and Awards Ceremony of The Ontario Historical Society in partnership with and hosted by Mississaugas of the New Credit First Nation (MNCFN) Highlights also include… • Traditional ceremony to celebrate the grand opening of Photo PHS the MNCFN’s new community centre utchison House Museum, garden. • Keynote address and First Nations book launch of Don Hwhich is owned and operated To mark this important anniver- Smith’s Mississauga Portraits: Ojibwe Voices from by the Peterborough Historical sary, the PHS held a celebration Nineteenth-Century Canada, including Allan Sherwin, Society (PHS), recently celebrat- with special guests that included author of Bridging Two Peoples: Chief Peter E. Jones ed its 175th anniversary. Built Ken Armstrong, the President of • Unveiling of Battle of York display by the citizens of Peterborough the PHS at the time the museum • Marketplace and exhibits in 1837 to convince Dr. John was developed, restoration ar- Hutchison not to move his chitect Peter John Stokes, OHS Registration and Lunch: $15 • Register by June 14 medical practice to Toronto, the Past President Jean Murray Cole 1.866.955.2755 or [email protected] residence was acquired by the PHS and PHS Honorary President and www.ontariohistoricalsociety.ca/agm in 1969. current chair of the Ontario Heri- The building was restored to tage Trust, Dr.
    [Show full text]