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"colonist" Definitions
  1. a person who settles in an area that has become a colony

1000 Sentences With "colonist"

How to use colonist in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "colonist" and check conjugation/comparative form for "colonist". Mastering all the usages of "colonist" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Old prejudices and stereotypes — Arab, colonist, white man, noble savage — clashed.
A colonist can survive, of course, with only one lung or one kidney.
The injured colonist fled to Cuba where he succumbed to his flesh wound.
"Colonist," premiering below, is the first single from the record, a collaboration with Mike Ladd.
Known as the "Radical Duke," Lennox was an avid anti-colonist and support of American Independence.
"All the permits are in place for this project to proceed," Horgan told the Times-Colonist.
" In multiple posts in January 303, Clovis refers to President Obama as "a Maoist" and "anti-colonist.
One day, a fellow-colonist, the critic Kenneth Burke, told Podhoretz that he needed to straighten out.
To his left is the "Kneeling Man," a white colonist whose humble stance may conceal nefarious intentions.
According to the Times Colonist, co-pilots Brian Stoltzfus, 55, and Curtis Wilkerson, 56, died on the scene.
These birds all sang a different song that had never been heard on Daphne, the song of the original colonist.
The original colonist had a genetic marker that we were able to trace all the way down through the generations.
That same year, the colonist Samuel Maverick, "desirous to have a breed of Negroes," attempted to create slaves through rape.
Records show a Dutch colonist, Justus Bush — no relation to the American presidents — bought the Mianus River property in 1738.
It was later linked to a depressed man who had gone missing earlier that year, the Victoria Times Colonist reported.
It would work like this: Colonist astronauts would take Martian soil, called regolith, and microwave it until it forms a brick.
According to the team, players can be a pirate, a smuggler, a serial killer, a bounty hunter, or a boring colonist.
Once Philadelphia and New England are out the room, a remaining colonist played by Beck Bennett declares his annoyance with both colonies.
According to The Times Colonist, there were no reported injuries from the tornado, but some trees in its path were torn down.
You play the role of a colonist left adrift by one of many greedy corporations that rule the outer reaches of space.
Most offensive, and what students vowed to overturn, was a curriculum that favored and exclusively reinforced Eurocentric and settler-colonist history and culture.
Elle Fanning plays one colonist, who befriends Enn ("Do more punk to me," she says), while Ruth Wilson is genuinely spooky as another.
Working as a phycisian in Jamaica, Sloane would tenderly minister to the drunken colonist whites, of while accusing any enslaved person of faking their pain.
She's also an incredibly impressive biochemist: Along with her three children and husband, Maureen was selected from a pool of two million people to be a space colonist.
Wurche, "out of curiosity, out of defiance," has a baby with a German colonist, and Aminah falls in love with a man who was to have sold her.
During the time of Williams's disappearance, Derek Sidenius, a reporter for a local Victoria paper called the Times (now the Times Colonist), covered the case against Williams extensively.
Here in the States, though, we've adopted a novel word meaning "one who gentrifies" — the active colonist, someone who tries on neighborhoods like shirts at a thrift shop.
"She's kind of a slow sort of thinking cat, but one thing is she is very protective of me," Baby's human roommate, Betty Jean Thompson, told the Times Colonist.
In Allen M. Steele's "Martian Blood," a Martian colonist leads an Egyptian-American astrobiology professor on a tour as he works to prove that life on Earth originated on Mars.
The funniest part, though, was that Theunis told The Times Colonist he was "keeping an eye on it," while the photo clearly shows him with his back to the storm.
The first, "Heroes, Martyrs and Epic Adventures," opens with three perspectives of the killing of the colonist Jane McCrea by Native Americans allied with the British during the Revolutionary War.
Poor planning and silly disputes amongst the crew led them to crash-land on a faraway water planet, leaving a small community of colonist marooned aboard a fully submerged ship.
"This is India seen through the eyes of the colonist and often with strongly propagandist intention," as head curator Robin Baker writes in an extensive blog post about the collection.
There's also Lost in Space, which ditches the kitsch of the 1960s original in favor of a straight science-fiction drama about the colonist Robinson family being, well, lost in space.
It was a mark of American aristocracy, the real-life Pocahontas having been reinvented (she probably did not save the life of a colonist called John Smith) as an "American princess".
They do so without caring whether or not your "colonists" suffer and die after arriving on their "colonist ship," or are nearly exterminated by forced labor and disease as the Taíno were.
Titled "The Last Supper," the four-minute video serves as a prologue to the events of the movie, introducing the colonist characters who have joined the Covenant mission to find a new world.
Judging by the short trailer unveiled last night, the game is a space western RPG wherein players take control of a stranded colonist awakening from cryosleep years later than they were supposed to.
As long as Europe remained the only "modern" Continent of the planet, its redundant populations kept being unloaded onto the still "premodern" lands — recycled into colonist settlers, soldiers or members of colonial administration.
Reeves was born in Beirut and lived in Canada for much of his life, but that didn't stop Ro from imagining the actor as the English colonist John Smith in the 1995 film. 
So we think of them at one remove, whether that's a beloved hardworking colonist on their last legs or someone who survives a car crash just because she's a baby and the alternative was older.
Dom had joined the church about a year after his divorce, and he'd volunteered as a colonist for the new settlement six months later, a commitment that required him to sign over all his assets to the church.
Under the dictionary criteria, some experts would argue, the revolutionary colonist soldiers who slaughtered Native Americans allied with the British were terrorists, as were John Brown's abolitionists who indiscriminately killed civilians in pro-slavery states before the Civil War.
Because like those dear two-dimensional colonist characters who narrowly escaped being called home at the end of Season 1, I stubbornly refuse to believe we've come this far and struggled this much and eaten this many potatoes to fail.
"The story is simple: "You awake from hibernation on a colonist ship lost in transit to its destination on the edge of the galaxy, only to find yourself in the midst of a deep conspiracy threatening to destroy the colony.
That said, Jenart praised the "strong values" of the Mundaneum's "anti-colonist" creators, noting that they "haven't found anything racist" or anti-Semitic in the digitization process, the one exception to this rule being the propaganda poster section of the collection.
A bitter dispute between South Korea and former colonist Japan has flared up, with Japanese clothing brand Uniqlo facing a consumer backlash after a new ad by the company was criticized as mocking victims of wartime forced labor and brothel workers.
SEOUL, Oct 22 (Reuters) - A bitter dispute between South Korea and former colonist Japan has flared up, with Japanese clothing brand Uniqlo facing a consumer backlash after a new ad by the company was criticised as mocking victims of wartime forced labour and brothel workers.
The narrative plot line revolved around an overlying alien colonist myth arc in which the US government is involved in an alien/human hybrid-cloning project, resistant to alien colonization, frequently interspersed with monster of the week episodes playing on the fears all for dramatic relief.
In contrast, I admired the precision of Altered Views (2019), Voluspa Jarpa's project for the Chilean Pavilion, an enclosed display that used six case studies to examine the history of European hegemony, with panoramas presenting European cannibalism, Viennese working women, "scientific" racism, Charcot's hysterical women, and other colonist themes.
It houses the 1857 Mother Colony House, built by George Hansen, the German colonist known as the Father of Anaheim, and the Woelke-Stoffel House, a Queen Anne relic that was built in 1894 for John Woelke, another German immigrant who made his way to Anaheim from Chicago, when the city was little more than a collection of orange and lemon groves.
For instance, the tiger is explored through the 1940s American "Flying Tigers" pilots, who painted vicious teeth on their planes; Ottoman tiles with tiger stripes that may have been designed to ward off evil (or just as an aesthetic appreciation); and the 1793 "Tipu's Tiger" mechanical organ, which, with its automaton of a colonist being mauled, was a contraption of Indian resistance.
Check out this first-act confrontation between Hamilton and a random Tory colonist, which Chirravur reimagines as a boss battle where whoever shouts the best wins: The combination of the game elements and the musical is remarkably complementary, because in many ways the stories within Hamilton really are battles — not just the literal Revolutionary War battles (although those are, naturally, on display in Chirravur's art) but the class conflicts and philosophical debates that took place during that turbulent period in history.
The Colonist, 1 January 1835 The Colonist was a weekly English-language tabloid newspaper published in Sydney from 1835 to 1840.
The house was occupied by the farmer-worker (colonist) who took care of the property for the church. With the breakup of the noble class, the colonist farmer became possessor of the property.
The Times Colonist is an English-language daily newspaper in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. It was formed by the merger in 1980 of the Victoria Daily Times, established in 1884, and the British Colonist (later the Daily Colonist), established in 1858 by Amor De Cosmos who was later British Columbia's second Premier. The British Colonist was B.C.'s first paper "of any permanence". De Cosmos was the editor until 1866 when D.W. Higgins took over for the next twenty years.
Victoria Times-Colonist, January 14, 1999. although he remained an employee in the station's production department, and returned to performing as an impressionist in comedy clubs."Presidential seal". Victoria Times-Colonist, March 6, 1999.
Victoria Times-Colonist, July 2, 2003. His first full-length play, Beat the Sunset, premiered at the Victoria Fringe Festival in 1993."AIDS drama one of Victorians' best ever". Victoria Times-Colonist, December 2, 1993.
Times - Colonist; Victoria, B.C. [Victoria, B.C]30 Oct 2000: A1 / FRONT.
The colonist is then deprived from food and the mass transmitter. The colonist uses batteries from his life supplies to reactivate the robot, and together they are left alone on the surface of a lifeless planet.
Subscriptions in aid of sufferers by the Indian famine, p. 2, 'Colonist', 13 October 1877 Four hundred pounds was raised.Editorial, p. 3, 'Colonist', 6 December 1877 On 19 December 1877 the Council elected Joseph Dodson as Mayor.
Daniel Edward Lapp is a Canadian folk musician based in Victoria, British Columbia and Pender Island.Lapp’s circle of life (and the joy of it). Mike Devlin / Times Colonist, May 22, 2013An Olympian fiddler. Victoria Times- Colonist, February 17, 2010.
Morris Moss (May 31, 18421896) was a British Columbian colonist and Canadian pioneer.
"Ex-speaker of Yukon 'ruled the chamber'". Victoria Times- Colonist, July 26, 2005.
Jane Long left Texas but returned in the 1820s as a bona fide colonist.
Ralph Hunt was a founding colonist of what is today known as Long Island.
"Maudie leads the way at Canadian Screen Awards". Victoria Times- Colonist, March 13, 2018.
Sir James Arndell Youl (1811–1904) was a Tasmanian colonist from New South Wales.
Moffatt was involved with a number of community organisations. In 1900 he was among those who sought to establish a volunteer Corps in Motueka.Motueka, Colonist, Volume XLIII, Issue 9720, 24 February 1900, Page 2 He was chair of the Motueka School CommitteeMotueka, Colonist, Volume XLIII, Issue 9783, 10 May 1900, Page 2 and in 1909 elected to the Nelson City School Committee.School Committee Elections, Colonist, Volume LI, Issue 12523, 27 April 1909, Page 4 An Ancient Order of Foresters friendly society member.Friendly Societies, Colonist, Volume XLIV, Issue 10008, 17 January 1901, Page 4 A member of the Motueka Fruitgrowers Co-operative Association.
In 2017, the newspaper building was sold, with the Times Colonist signing a long-term lease for most of the main floor once the rejuvenation of the building is complete. In 2018, the newspaper announced it would contract out printing of the paper, allowing it to focus on the content and distribution of the newspaper. Since October 1, 2018, the newspaper has been printed by Black Press in Ladysmith. The first 110 years of the British Colonist (later, the Daily Colonist) are available online, with free access, through the efforts of the Times Colonist, the University of Victoria and other funding partners.
They saw renewed use in World War II as troop cars and surviving colonist cars were heavily used in the post World War II boom in immigration. By the 1960s most colonist cars were worn out and were replaced by standard passenger cars as demand for immigrant trains from sea ports fell in the wake of increased travel by air. Today, two Canadian Pacific Railway colonist cars are preserved in Canada at the Calgary Heritage Park in Calgary, Alberta."Colonist Car 1202 Restoration", Calgary Heritage Park and at the West Coast Railway Association's museum in Squamish, British Columbia.
There are three types of buildings in the game: production buildings are required for producing goods, "violet buildings" grant players in-game advantages when occupied by a colonist, and large violet buildings provide bonus victory points if occupied at the end of the game. Mayor: Each player in turn order takes one colonist from the colonist ship until its supply is exhausted. The player who selected Mayor may then take an additional colonist from the central supply. After this, players may place their newly acquired colonists on their plantations, quarries, and buildings, as well as reposition their existing colonists.
The Colonist was founded by John Dunmore Lang with a religious and political agenda. First published on 1 January 1835 by Henry Bull and J. Spilsbury, The Colonist was published from 1835 until 1840, after which it was absorbed by the Sydney Herald.
Meusebach's position was to rectify the land holdings. He issued 729 colonist land scripts in the amount of 324,160 acres. Three other Texas General Land Office commissioners also issued scripts, for the aggregate total of 1,735,200 acres in colonist land holdings.King (1967) p.
In reviewing the album, the Times Colonist wrote that the tracks on the album "seem to have seamlessly grown out of Fisher's Kerouacian rootlessness and contagious energy".Blake, Joseph (February 16, 2003). "Quirky, soulful, earthy – these discs have it", Times Colonist, p. B11.
Oxford English Dictionary; citing the Daily Colonist of Victoria, British Columbia, dated 5 April 1911.
The rare colonist can only adaptively radiate into as many forms as there are niches.
A colonist arrives on a deserted planet and is immediately attacked by various monsters. Moments before the colonist meets his death, a protective field is activated by the trading robot QBF-41. It turns out that the monsters are merely a ploy used by the robot. Using the mass transmitter (a device that creates "everything necessary for life" for free), the colonist orders shaving razors which arrives at a huge shipping cost.
R.J.Berwyn Richard Jones Berwyn (October 1837 – 25 December 1917) was an early Welsh colonist in Patagonia.
As Duncan Cameron appeared nearby again that evening, one colonist fired at him to no effect.
"Us vs. Them: Architects and amateurs have their say on Victoria buildings", Times Colonist, p. D6.
He studied creative writing at the University of Victoria."Author, author". Victoria Times- Colonist, January 9, 2003.
In 2015, Glacier Media sold all its island papers except for the Times Colonist to Black Press.
Count Joachim von Pfeil (1857-1924) was a German explorer and colonist in Africa and New Guinea.
"Norwegian Cruise's private Caribbean isle gets a serious spruce-up". Times-Colonist (Victoria, British Columbia). p. D5.
The state of destruction in Colonia Díaz was so large, no colonist ever returned to that land.
BC Archives and "The Daily British Colonist and Victoria Chronicle" vol. 17, no. 87 (March 1867): 2.
"Gigging with a computer- generated frog likely big break for Windsor, Ont., singer", Times Colonist, p. D7.
The Colonist was a newspaper published in Nelson, New Zealand. It was published from 1857 to 1920.
Fell became Mayor of Nelson on 23 November 1882Editorial, Colonist, Volume XXVI, Issue 3627, 24 November 1882, Page 3 when Edward Everett resigned. Fell remained Mayor until 21 December 1887Installation of Mayor, Colonist, Volume XXX, Issue 5089, 22 December 1887, Page 3 when he was succeeded by John Sharp.
According to the Audit Bureau of Circulations, the average daily paid circulation for the Times Colonist, Tuesday to Friday, was 49,343 for the twelve months ending December, 2013. Since then, paid circulation has dropped to less than 31,000 copies daily. The Times Colonist is published six days a week (Tuesday to Sunday) and is sold by subscription or at newsstands. The newsroom of the Times Colonist has about 35 people, working as reporters, columnists, photographers, editors, layout designers, graphic artists and editorial assistants.
City Mayoralty, Colonist, Volume LVI, Issue 13455, 29 April 1914, Page 5 The final count was so close (5 votes) that it took a further week before the outcome was confirmed.Nelson City, Colonist, Volume LVI, Issue 13478, 20 May 1914, Page 2 Lock won by 1050 votes to Snodgrass' 1045. Lock stood again in 1915. Charles Harley campaigned against him and became mayor,Page 6, Advertisements Column 3, Colonist, Volume LVII, Issue 13766, 1 May 1915 winning by 1,223 votes to 1,065.
In Britain it was a rare vagrant and is now a new colonist. It is widespread on Jersey.
"Whodunits set in 'duchy of Westmount' will appeal to tweed-curtain aficionados". Victoria Times-Colonist, August 1, 2004.
A museum building houses a collection of early American primitive paintings by colonist and folk artist Olof Krans.
George Fenwick (1603?–1657), was an English Parliamentarian, and a leading colonist in the short-lived Saybrook Colony.
SS Adelaide, which struck and sunk the Colonist The Colonist left Kiama for Sydney at 6:20am on Saturday 1 March 1890 loaded with blue metal and entered Sydney Heads at about 3pm that day and beat up the West Channel of the harbour. At 4:45 the vessel was on a tack from Shark Point heading for Garden Island, when the steamer Adelaide came into sight on the northern side of Pinchgut. The Colonist had cleared Bradleys Head and was midway between there and Garden Island with the Adelaide heading to Clark Island when the collision occurred. The Colonist was struck on the starboard side aft of the fore rigging with the schooner sinking almost immediately.
Victoria Times-Colonist, April 26, 2015. She is a specialist in early American history, with research areas including gender and sexuality, the American relationship with the French Revolution, and the War of 1812."Our interpretation of history is clouded by the fog of war". Victoria Times-Colonist, February 19, 2012.
For instance, in one such side mission Hawk is enlisted to help a Dutch colonist find several kidnapped children.
William A. Mathews (1800–1856) was a 19th-century Texas colonist, soldier, courier and quartermaster in the Texas Revolution.
Major John Fairfax Bolling (January 27, 1676April 20, 1729) was a colonist, farmer and politician in the Virginia Colony.
Langdon was nominated as one of the best artists in Victoria in the "Times Colonist Music Awards" for 2011.
Sir William Herbert (c. 1554 – 4 March 1593) was a Welsh colonist in Ireland, author and Member of Parliament.
Then, in 1870, Wide Bay and Burnett News commenced triweekly publication, with The Colonist starting weekly publication in 1884.
"Harry Bloy resigns from Cabinet post in B.C. government over leaked email". National Post When Eminata purchased University Canada West in 2008, the Times Colonist reported that the corporation had annual revenues of approximately $50 million and owned 30 education centres across Canada.Times Colonist (24 Nov 2008). "Education tycoon buys University Canada West".
Victoria Times-Colonist, October 5, 2016. where he has worked as a commercial fisherman."Poetry". Toronto Star, February 13, 2016.
Louis Friedrich Wurm (1832 – 1 December 1910), generally known as Fred or Frederick was an early colonist of South Australia.
Robert Hayman (14 August 1575 - November 1629) was a poet, colonist and Proprietary Governor of Bristol's Hope colony in Newfoundland.
Charles Rochon (1673–1733) was a French colonist and was one of the four founders of modern-day Mobile, Alabama.
1857, d.1925). Alexandra (Dance) c. 1899 "Papers Past" "Nelson Garrison Band" Colonist, Nelson, 15 December 1899. Annexation (March) c.
Martlet stories are regularly picked up by larger publications including the CBC, CTV News, the Times Colonist, and Chek News.
William Harris Wharton (April 27, 1802 – March 14, 1839) was an American colonist, diplomat, senator and statesman in early Texas.
With that, what is now Lowell became entirely colonist-owned, existing as part of the towns of Chelmsford and Dracut.
Subsequently, there were reports that wreckage from the ship had been found on Vancouver Island leading to fears she was lost, but she reached Nome safely on June 8.WestVictoria Daily Colonist May 20, 1904New York Times May 24, 1904Victoria Daily Colonist, June 25, 1904 The Victoria Daily Colonist could not find the origin of the reports and branded them a deliberate hoax.Victoria Daily Colonist, May 24, 1904 p3, May 26, 1904, p8 The Corwin continued in the passenger and freight businessHarrison p 374New York Times May 31, 1914 and from 1906 to 1910 held a contract to transport mail to towns on Norton Sound and the Seward Peninsula. She was the first ship to reach Nome in the spring in 1902–1909, 1913 and 1914.
They also published the United Empire. After the partnership ended in 1853, with partners, he bought the British Colonist. In 1858, he sold this paper and set up his own called the Atlas; later that same year, he bought the Colonist back. Thompson had also served on Toronto city council from 1849 to 1854.
John Rolfe, a colonist from Jamestown, was the first colonist to grow tobacco in America. He arrived in Virginia with tobacco seeds procured on an earlier voyage to Trinidad, and in 1612 he harvested his inaugural crop for sale on the European market.Brandt, p.20 Rolfe’s tobacco operation was an instant boom for American exports.
It was low tide when the ship's boat was launched approximately 400m from the wreck, and proceeded to the wreck by a combination of rowing and dragging. Aboard the boat was the chief officer of the colonist (Mr. Hawkins) had travelled with the Thetis when approximately 200m from the wreck they were met by the remaining crew of the Colonist. As the weather was unsettled and the tide was low it was decided to spend the night aboard the Colonist and tell the Thetis to stand off in deeper water.
Its owners launched in early January 1863 a new daily newspaper called the Daily Telegraph and reverted the Otago Colonist to a weekly with a change of name to the Weekly Colonist. This made Dunedin the first New Zealand city to have two daily newspapers until both the Daily Telegraph and Weekly Colonist closed on 9 April 1864. Twelve weeks later the Otago Daily Mail was launched but it was not competitive and had closed by April 1865. In January 1863 the ODT halved its price to threepence (3d).
Victoria Times-Colonist, December 1, 1993. and Come On!."Gay plays ring true for straights, too". Vancouver Sun, July 3, 1997.
She then returned to British Columbia and participated in several art exhibitions."The Daily Colonist (1928-06-27)" - Internet Archive (poorly OCR's)"The Daily Colonist (1928-10-25)" - Internet Archive (poorly OCR'd"The Fine Arts in Vancouver". WW Thom - 1969. A collection of her sketches and watercolours from this time period is in the Royal British Columbia Museum.
The European conquest of South and Central America, beginning in the late 15th century, was initially executed by male soldiers and sailors from the Iberian Peninsula (Spain and Portugal). The new soldier-settlers fathered children with Amerindian women and later with African slaves. These mixed-race children were generally identified by the Spanish colonist and Portuguese colonist as "Castas".
She was ransomed by Abraham Shurd, a colonist from Pemaquid (now Bristol, Maine), and returned to her husband on September 17, 1631.
In 1866, capitalist agriculturalist John Ewen Davidson was the first colonist to plant sugar on these plains located around the Murray River.
Victoria Times- Colonist, March 7, 2008. and won that year's City of Victoria Butler Book Award."Tale of paper trail a winner".
The settlement's full terms were undisclosed.Business school drops use of Apple's forbidden fruit, Times Colonist, April 1, 2011. Accessed July 27, 2012.
Apkar Tebir was an Armenian colonist and priest. He was one of the first to set up a printing press in Constantinople.
Andrew Ward (ca 1597-1659) was a colonist, judge, farmer, and a founding father of the Connecticut towns of Wethersfield, Stamford, and Fairfield.
Henry Brockman (1622 or 1623 – c. 1690s) was an early colonist to Maryland and founder of a large family in the United States.
Victoria Times-Colonist, February 12, 1976. and a two-time Gemini Award nominee for the television films Ikwé and Lost in the Barrens.
Harley, a city councillor since the 1890s, defeated William Lock by 1223 votes to 1065 to become Mayor of Nelson in 1915.Page 6 Advertisements Column 3, Colonist, Volume LVII, Issue 13766, 1 May 1915 Despite being pressed by the councillers in 1917 to stand for another term Harley declined.The Colonist, Saturday March 24, 1917 News of the Day, Colonist, Volume LVIII, Issue 14371, 24 March 1917, Page 4 William Snodgrass won the ensuing mayoral election and became the next mayor of Nelson. Harley was a trustee of the Cawthorn Estate, and a member of the Ancient Order of Foresters.
Van Sittert, L., 2002. ‘Our irrepressible fellow-colonist’, p.400 It was proposed to be used as a “living fence”, to separate and protect property but, in the Western Cape, it became, in effect, more of an interesting feature in gardens.Van Sittert, L., 2002. ‘Our irrepressible fellow-colonist’, p.399 When it established itself in the Eastern Cape and Karoo, it took control of the environment around it because of its being drought resistant, its ability to reproduce without seeds as well as its “extensive seed dispersal”.Van Sittert, L., 2002. ‘Our irrepressible fellow- colonist’, p.
Similarly, the Victoria Times-Colonist called it a "briskly paced hour of entertainment television".Strachan, A, "Prison Break goes potty for its fans" Victoria Times-Colonist. November 6, 2006, Retrieved on November 7, 2006. On the other hand, the critic from the Arizona Daily Star stated that the episode "underwhelmed" him and that "all it did was create more cliffhangers".
He mentioned to a customer (Charles H. Gibbons, editor of the Victoria Daily Colonist) that he wrote verses, with the result that six poems by "R.S." on the Boer Wars had appeared in the Colonist by July 1900Peter J. Mitham, Introduction to "Mossback Minstrelsy: The British Columbia Verse of Robert W. Service," Canadian Poetry No. 39, UWO, Web, Apr. 5, 2011.
Local news receives the greatest prominence in the Times Colonist. Stories and photographs about Greater Victoria are often featured on the front page. The newspaper also has national and international stories, plus sections covering the arts, sports, and business. The Times Colonist also has a website as well as an e-edition, which offers a digital replica of the printed pages.
In 1960 work began on a tunnel from Sooke Lake Reservoir to Japan Gulch in the Goldstream valley. The possibility of a tunnel had already been broached by the engineering consultant Arthur L. Adams in 1905,"City Goes to Goldstream," The Daily Colonist, 23 Aug., 1905, p. 1, and again in 1907,"Full Data Received on Water Question," The Daily Colonist, Jan.
Going to Sooke Lake was supported by a two-thirds majority of those voting.”Hall Elected to Mayorality,” The Daily Colonist, Jan. 17, 1908, p. 1 It was, however, not until November 1910 that council finally passed the bylaw authorizing the development of Sooke Lake as a source of water supply.”No Opposition to Sooke Lake Bylaw,” The Daily Colonist, Nov.
"Eaton's downtown Victoria store expected to survive financial crisis", Times Colonist. When Eaton's went bankrupt in 1999, the Eaton's store in this mall was occupied first by Sears Canada, and then by The Bay (now Hudson's Bay), for which the mall was renamed.Our History: Victoria at HBC HeritageGidney, Norman (May 3, 2003). "Bay celebrates history in return to downtown", Times Colonist, p. E1.
"Revelations in Arctic; Trip to Hudson Bay inspires scholar to make film about effects of dams on climate". Victoria Times-Colonist, March 2, 2012.
Ranked (47th) in the top 100 Vancouver Island athletes for the 20th Century by the Times Colonist Newspaper. Marilyn married fellow rower Howard Campbell.
"Robertson and the F-word" , Victoria Times Colonist, July 14, 2010."Vancouver mayor's gaffe slows city trust-building efforts" , Vancouver Sun, July 14, 2010.
It is a naturally occurring colonist of certain dairy products particularly cheeses and is sometime used to inoculate wash-rind and bloomy rind cheeses.
By Darron Kloster, Times Colonist, Apr 18, 2010. via Canada.com. The labels for its products are designed by local artists."The Artistry of Beer".
"Victoria Water Works," The British Colonist (Victoria), Feb. 25, 1873, p. 2. Debentures were issued raising the money needed, and work began in 1874.
"CBC to interview literary winners". Victoria Times-Colonist, March 20, 2010. The program was launched in 2008, replacing Ian Brown's similar show Talking Books.
'Prickly pear in the Eastern Cape since the 1950s', pp.190,201Van Sittert, 2002. ‘Our irrepressible fellow-colonist’, p.406Zimmermann, H.G. and Moran, V.C., 1991.
Most of the secondary texts published during first decade or so after the Emergency were sympathetic to the British/Colonist/Loyalist point of view.
"CD Reviews". Victoria Times-Colonist, December 12, 2000. They recorded their next album, 2001's O Witness, at The Tragically Hip's Bathouse Recording Studio.
Since the establishment of the American colonies, the British Navy protected the developing colonies, and the colonist paid taxes to the crown through import and export tariffs, taxes, and when requested, raised armies for London. This laissez-faire system where the colonist had a large degree of self-rule worked until 1763, when the British government decided that it needed to raise capital to pay off debt accrued through the French and Indian war, and the more encompassing Seven Years' War. In the minds of the British, the colonist ought to pay a significant portion of the debt as the war benefited the Americans by removing the threat of Indians and French colonist from their lands. Without consultation, Parliament passed the Sugar Act of 1764, and taxed molasses at three pence per gallon to collect revenue and pay off debts.
Edward was a direct descendant of the early American colonist Daniel Smith of Watertown, Massachusetts. He was the second cousin of attorney James Smith Bush.
Richard Lee (1726–1795), known most commonly as "Squire", was a prominent Virginian colonist, and American politician, who was active in the American Revolutionary War.
Weis, Frederick Lewis. Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonist Who Came to America before 1700. Eds. William R. Beall and Kaleen E. Beall. 8th ed.
Albius was born in St. Suzanne, Réunion. His mother, a slave, died during his birth. The colonist keeping Edmond in slavery was Féréol Bellier Beaumont.
Portrait of George Sandys George Sandys ( "sands"; 2 March 1578Sandys, George, in: Encyclopædia Britannica online. – March 1644) was an English traveller, colonist, poet, and translator.
Thomas Savage (1608 - February 14, 1682) was an English soldier and New England colonist and merchant, attaining the rank of major in King Philip's War.
National Post, January 20, 2004. The Secret History of Rock,"Secrets of rock history shared with Victoria". Victoria Times-Colonist, April 19, 2013. and ExploreMusic.
Canadian National colonist cars are preserved at the Canada Science and Technology Museum in Ottawa, the Railway Museum of Eastern Ontario in Smiths Falls, Ontario and the New Brunswick Railway Museum in Hillsborough, New Brunswick. The Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21 built a replica of a 1920s era colonist car complete with immigrant luggage and cooking stove as part of its 2015 expansion.
The Canadian Pacific eventually built a fleet of over a thousand colonist cars which played a major role in settling the Canadian west. Interior of Canadian National Railways colonist car, 1926. Note lowered sleeping berths at end of car. Rival Canadian Railways such as the Intercolonial Railway and later the Canadian Northern also built fleets of colonists cars in the peak years of immigration before World War I. However in the wake of immigration restrictions in the 1920s and a near-halt to immigration during the Great Depression, many colonist cars were converted to Combine cars or work cars by the Canadian National Railway which inherited these fleets.
In Lock's 1913 campaign for the mayoralty he sought lower rates and better use of Council funds.Mr Lock's Candidature, Colonist, Volume LV, Issue 13711, 30 April 1913, Page 5 Lock was elected with 1,226 votes to William Wallace Snodgrass' 1,134.Page 6 Advertisements Column 4, Colonist, Volume LV, Issue 13712, 1 May 1913, Page 6 In 1914 Snodgrass mounted a strong campaign against Lock, citing his failure to meet his election promises.Page 6 Advertisements Column 3, Colonist, Volume LVI, Issue 13453, 27 April 1914, Page 6 Lock, with support from some councillors, mounted an equally strong campaign against Snodgrass, making it one of the fiercest election battles the city had seen.
Colonel Philip Pieterse Schuyler or Philip Pieterse (1628 – May 9, 1683) was a Dutch-born colonist landowner who was the progenitor of the American Schuyler family.
The village of Jore, a Cherokee Middle Town visited by colonist Alexander Cuming in 1730, may have been named after Joara.Hudson, The Juan Pardo Expeditions, 87.
He has also written and directed comedy and musical theatre productions."Comedy, music and more at the Mary Winspear Centre". Victoria Times-Colonist, July 13, 2004.
20 No. 25 Issue 1017."Actress Brings To Life Silken’s Pain,Triumph". Times Colonist. June 26, 1996"Silken’s Olympic triumph: true grit in the True North".
Francis Newman (circa 1605 – 18 November 1660) was an English colonist in America. He served as Governor of the New Haven Colony from 1658 to 1659.
George Augustus Frederick Elphinstone Dalrymple (6 May 1826 – 22 January 1876) was a colonist, explorer, public servant and politician, member of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland.
Ambrose Cobbs (1603 – c. 1655) was an early Virginia colonist and planter who established the long lasting social and political Cobb dynasty in the southern states.
Page was born in Bilston, Staffordshire, England on 31 March 1878 and his family migrated to New Zealand in 1879.Mr George Page Senior, Colonist, Volume LIV, Issue 13518, 11 September 1912, Page 1 His father was also named George.Who's who in New Zealand and the Western Pacific, 4th edition, Dr G H Schofield, LT Watkins Ltd, Wellington, 1941 Page attended Hampton Street Primary School, Nelson.Nelson Education Board, Colonist, Volume XXXVI, Issue 7520, 5 January 1893, Page 3 He also played in the Nelson Garrison Band under Herr Gustav Handke and was noted as a fine musician.Untitled, Colonist, Volume XLVII, Issue 11333, 16 May 1905, Page 2 In December 1898 Page joined his father's furniture making business, George Page and Sons.Page 2 Advertisements Column 3, Colonist, Volume XLII, Issue 9354, 14 December 1898, Page 2 When his father died in 1912 he had become its Managing Director.
Israel Helm (c. 1630- c. 1701) was a colonist and soldier in New Sweden who became one of the first settlers in the area of Philadelphia, PA.
New York, Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1915. . Retrieved February 16, 2013. p. 156. In 1685, William married Anne (1664–1694), daughter of Hon. Henry Corbin (colonist) (ca.
National Post, February 27, 2013. and a longlisted nominee for the Scotiabank Giller Prize."Victoria author makes Giller Prize long list". Victoria Times-Colonist, September 4, 2012.
Staats Long Morris (27 August 1728 – 28 January 1800) was an American colonist who served as a major general in the British army during the American Revolution.
Kluyveromyces marxianus has been isolated in dairy products, sisal leaves, and sewage from sugar manufacturing factories. It is also a naturally occurring colonist of plants, including corn.
It was invented by W McLeod from Dunedin. Pettit also exported fruit and general produce. He was also a Director of the Jenkins Hill Coal Prospecting Company.Jenkins Hill Coal Prospecting Association, Colonist, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 8353, 14 September 1895, Page 2 The association was renamed the Ennerglyn Coal Mining CompanyPage 4 Advertisements Column 3, Colonist, Volume XXXVIII, Issue 8365, 28 September 1895, Page 4 with Pettit remaining as a Director.
Harley retired in 1917, and Snodgrass and Lock competed again for the mayoralty. Snodgrass won 1,189 votes to 1,149.Page 6 Advertisements Column 2, Colonist, Volume LVIII, Issue 14401, 1 May 1917 In the 1919 election Snodgrass won by 1,283 votes to 1,189 against Lock.Page 6, Advertisements Column 2, Colonist, Volume LXI, Issue 15062, 3 May 1919 Lock's persistence paid off with him being elected from 1921 to 1927.
They are supposed to be logged for a street in the area of Langford. In February 2008 the Times Colonist reported of protesters being removed.Bill Cleverley, RCMP move in on anti-highway protest site, in: Times Colonist, 13 February 2008. In 1985 already a protection program was started in Washington's Gifford Pinchot National Forest. At 338 spots more than 6.000 CMTs were identified, of which 3.000 are protected now.
John Ewen Davidson John Ewen Davidson (2 March 1841 in London – 2 September 1923 in Oxford) was a colonist sugar planter, slave owner, murderer, and miller in Queensland.
The first game in the series details the story of a boy named Leo Stenbuck, a colonist from Jupiter who accidentally finds himself piloting the Orbital Frame Jehuty.
The change came about with the just-in-time arrival of a new Governor, Lord Delaware, and a new colonist with a successful business idea named John Rolfe.
Mike Devlin, "Legends of Canadian ska re-unite". Victoria Times-Colonist, March 17, 2000. Their show at Toronto's Lee's Palace on March 24, 2000 was webcasted by primeticket.net.
The Aerodrome: Arthur Rowe SpurlingLt. Spurling Won Flying Cross, The Royal Gazette and Colonist Daily (now The Royal Gazette), Hamilton, Bermuda. 19 September 1918.POTSI (archived): Sqn. Ldr.
"Coming out inside". Victoria Times-Colonist, August 6, 1995. He moved to Victoria in 1986 to study English at the University of Victoria."Musing on a Queer Career".
"Nelly soars with 'what feels right'" . Times-Colonist via Canada.com. Retrieved on 7 May 2008. As of 2019, the album has sold more than 12 million copies worldwide.
In the 1950s, he reflected on his racing career; "Perhaps Providence had given him Colonist as a comfort in his old age and to console him for disappointments".
Accessed 2011-02-25. A post office called Colona was established in 1891, and remained in operation until 1943. Colona is a name derived from Spanish meaning "colonist".
Rice Hooe (b. c1599) was a Virginia colonist and member of the colonial House of Burgesses in the 1640s. He was born in about 1599.Hayden, Horace Edwin.
To determine who would be Councillor, the returning officer drew lots, which resulted Moffatt being the successful candidate.Motueka, Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XLII, 25 April 1907, Page 2 Moffatt retired from business and moved from Motueka to Nelson in October 1907.Valedictory, Colonist, Volume XLIX, Issue 12068, 17 October 1907, Page 2 In 1908 he stood for the Nelson electorate against John Graham and Harry Atmore. He gained only 317 votes to their 2909 and 2713 votes.Editorial, Colonist, Volume LI, Issue 12405, 21 November 1908, Page 2 Moffatt stood for the Nelson Harbour Board in 1911 and 1913 but was unsuccessful.Harbour Board Elections, Colonist, Volume LIII, Issue 13091, 27 April 1911, Page 3The Harbour Board, Colonist, Volume LV, Issue 13712, 1 May 1913, Page 6 He also stood again for the Nelson electorate, this time receiving a greatly increased number of votes, but still losing to Harry Atmore in the second ballot.
Elizur Holyoke (1618 1676) of Springfield, Massachusetts was an English colonist, surveyor, scribe, soldier, the namesake of the mountain, Mount Holyoke, and indirectly, of the city of Holyoke, Massachusetts.
Victoria Times-Colonist, November 20, 1998. In the early 2000s Curran joined Anthem Records as an artists and repertoire manager."Junkhouse guitarist Achen dies". Hamilton Spectator, March 17, 2010.
Francis Rawle (1660 – 5 March 1727), originally from England, was a Quaker and colonist in Philadelphia, where he served in administrative positions and was a member of the assembly.
His father was a colonist, landowner, planter, and merchant who served as the 26th Speaker of the Virginia House of Burgesses. Randolph graduated from the College of William & Mary.
Victoria Times-Colonist, October 16, 2008. She followed up with the novel Leaving Now in 2012.""Leaving Now" by Arleen Pare". All Points West (CBCV-FM), August 13, 2012.
Medardus de Nympz is the Latinized name of Medard zu Nimesch,Maiterth, Konrad Andreas (1910): Chronik der Familie Medard (Maiterth) zu Nimesch an early medieval German colonist in Transylvania.
Germany and Greece."Dancing to a tribal rhythm" . Times Colonist, November 10, 2012. They have been featured on CBC Radio's Q,"Pow wow-step with A Tribe Called Red".
Front page of first issue, 5 August 1834 The True Colonist Van Diemen's Land Political Despatch, And Agricultural And Commercial Advertiser was a newspaper published in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.
Google Maps shows the structure still standing in October 2012. A meeting house built by the group was moved from what is now the parking lot of Fourteen Holy Helpers Roman Catholic Church to its present site, 919 Mill Road. There it houses the West Seneca Historical Society and Museum. Historical Society and Museum (2010) contains a photograph of the kitchen display, which includes a colonist scrub board and a mannequin wearing a colonist dress.
The landing and paved Ferry Road cost $80,000, but on opening in 1931 the crossing time reduced to 10 minutes.The Daily Colonist, 23 May 1931 When tendered in 1932, three bids required no subsidy to operate the ferry, while Mr. Robson, the private operator for the prior six years, offered to pay $1,800 per annum. The province was responsible for supplying an appropriate vessel.The Daily Colonist, 3 Sep 1932 The Ladner- Woodwards No. 3.
It is usually assumed that Afonso Gonçalves Baldaia, the Henrican explorer, is one and the same person as Afonso Gonçalves de Antona Baldaia, an Azorean colonist, although there are no documents confirming that. The latter Baldaia emerged around 1450 in connection with the Flemish colonist Jacob of Bruges, who induced the recently widowed Baldaia to move to the Azores islands, as one of the initial settlers of Terceira Island.Archivo dos Açores, 1882, vol. 4, p.
William Henry Shephard (c. 1812 – 29 June 1848) was an early colonist of South Australia. The son of a lawyer, Shephard arrived at Port Adelaide on the privately chartered Tam o' Shanter (which rather ignominiously got stuck on the mud flats)Hasenohr, E. W. H. Gray – a pioneer colonist of South Australia Adelaide 1977 in 1836. Thomas Maslin (for whom Maslins Beach is named) was a fellow emigrant and later his brother-in-law.
In the 18th century, French colonist Pierre Zerangue acquired the land where Jeanerette developed from the Spanish government. Zerangue received an "order of survey and settlement" from Spain for . Under Spanish law, if a person occupied a piece of property for two years, they could apply for title to the land under an "order of survey settlement." Colonist Nicholas Provost acquired property extending from the present-day experimental farm to the St. Mary Parish line.
Victoria Times- Colonist, September 18, 2007. in 2007. Originally from London, Ontario, she is currently based in Toronto, where she teaches creative writing at the University of Toronto's Innis College.
Charles de Saint-Étienne de La Tour (1593–1666) was a French colonist and fur trader who served as Governor of Acadia from 1631–1642 and again from 1653–1657.
1836 1860 1875 James Shaw (12 January 1815 – 1 September 1881) was a Scottish painter, photographer, engraver, lithographer, surveyor, and lawyer. He was also an early colonist of South Australia.
Heard's Fort was established in 1774 by colonist Stephen Heard. The settlement served as the temporary capital of the new state of Georgia from February 3, 1780, until early 1781.
His mother, Octavia Knipping Rochet, was the granddaughter of a French colonist, and the great-granddaughter of a German merchant who was married to a Dominican woman born to Spanish colonists.
On 9 September 1894, traveling from Newcastle, New South Wales on her way to Adelaide while carrying a cargo of coal the Colonist was wrecked on Newcastle's Oyster Bank at position .
"Canada Reads". Victoria Times-Colonist, October 2, 2005. He has also appeared as a radio host on Toronto radio stations Edge 102 and Boom 97.3."Plan your week with our picks".
Here's to Life! is a Canadian comedy-drama film by Arne Olsen, released in 2000."Festival film is old hat to those who recall shoot". Victoria Times- Colonist, September 29, 2000.
The film's original working title was Old Hats."Old, Old Hats shows up at festival". Victoria Times-Colonist, September 29, 2000. It was filmed in Victoria in the summer of 1999.
Garth Martens is a Canadian poet."Watchful storyteller". Victoria Times- Colonist, December 30, 2009. He was the winner of the Bronwen Wallace Memorial Award in 2011,"Local poet wins literary prize".
The Lenauheim village was founded by German colonist (Banat Swabians) in 1767. Originally called Csatád, in 1926 the village was renamed Lenauheim after the poet Nikolaus Lenau who was born here.
District News, Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XXXVII, Issue 99, 12 May 1903, Page 1 Moffatt was a representative for the Huia Rugby Football Club on the Nelson Rugby Union.Nelson Rugby Union, Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XLII, 27 March 1908, Page 2 He was a member of the Nelson Debating SocietyNelson Debating Society, Colonist, Volume LI, Issue 12603, 29 July 1909, Page 2 and the Nelson Provincial Scottish Society.Nelson Provincial Scottish Society, Colonist, Volume LIII, Issue 13020, 8 February 1911, Page 5 Moffatt was named as one of the founders of the Nelson Advancement Society in 1914Nelson Advancement Society, Colonist, Volume LVI, Issue 13413, 10 March 1914, Page 7 and was also noted as being one of the main drivers behind the establishment of Motueka High School.
Colonist cars were a solution to the challenge of North America settlement in the mid and late 19th century which saw the growth of settlement areas in the western interior of the continent, thousands of miles from the seaports where most immigrants arrived. Colonist cars began in the 1840s as the cheapest form of transport for immigrants who could only afford basic fares. At first they provided only benches around the side of what were often boxcars which could be converted to grain cars for return trips to the east coast. Canadian Pacific Railway colonist car No. 2809, 1924 However by the 1880s, railways competing for immigrant traffic on longer routes to western North America developed specialized cars for emigrants providing simple sleeping berths and cooking facilities.
In 1777, Ana Isabel Berrelleza married Juan José Peralta, another member of the Anza colonist party,Christy, Julia. "California Spanish Genealogy: Directory De Anza." Hosted at SFGenealogy. Retrieved on August 16, 2009.
Jean Baptiste Baudreau Dit Graveline II (1715–1757) was a colonist in French Louisiana, and is one of the few persons to ever be executed in the Americas by the breaking wheel.
Victoria Times-Colonist, May 2, 2017. She is also an international speaker and consultant. Of Cree, Lakota and Scottish descent, Smith is based in Victoria, British Columbia."About Monique Gray Smith", 2019.
June Ogilvie, Westralian Portraits, edited by L. Hunt 1979 pp 214-21. His father was businessman and colonist Charles Rischbieth. His cousin Oswald Rishbeth was a pioneer of academic geography in Britain.
Born in Lempster, New Hampshire, he was the second of five children and only son of Benajah Ames and Amanda (Carey) Miner. His father was a descendant of the colonist Thomas Miner.
Col. Edmund Quincy II (; 1628–1698) was an American Massachusetts Colonist, soldier, planter, politician, and merchant. He emigrated to colonial Massachusetts in 1633 with his father, Col. Edmund Quincy I (1602-1636).
William Henry Gray (18 January 1808 – 6 September 1896), generally known as W. H. Gray, was a pioneer colonist of South Australia who amassed considerable wealth through ownership and development of land.
The Daily Colonist, December 18, 1925, p.19 From there she touched off in Hong Kong and continued on to the Philippines arriving in Manila on Christmas Day.Oakland Tribune, December 29, 1925, p.
It may derive from a Germanic word meaning "serf" or "half-free colonist".Walde & Hofmann (1965) Bd. 1. A - L. 4. Aufl. Other authorities suggest the term was of Celtic or Iranian origin.
A colonist car (or emigrant car) was a type of railway passenger coach designed to provide inexpensive long-distant transportation for immigrants, mainly in North America. They were noted for very spartan accommodation.
By the 1890s, about 33% of Kamloops were ethnic Chinese; they worked primarily on construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway.Hewlett, Jason. "Chinese museum would right historical wrongs, Kamloops group says" (Archive). Times Colonist.
In 2006, a Times- Colonist news article estimated the homeless population to have increased by 30% in just a few weeks due to the anticipated tourism boom of the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.Homeless influx hits Victoria Victoria Times Colonist, 16 May 2006 In early 2008, an anti-homelessness programme based on a successful Italian programme was introduced to Victoria.Victoria Times Colonist, 13 January 2008 Despite Victoria's reputation as a tourist destination, pervasive homelessness and panhandling are serious problems in the downtown area as is "open-air" drug use. The homeless survey conducted by the Victoria Cool-Aid Society found 50% of the homeless population identify themselves as being of First Nations origin, and the majority of people living on the streets do not receive income assistance from the government.
Victoria Times-Colonist, May 1, 2004. and her supporting television roles as Tonya in The L Word"Imperfection works perfectly for 'crazy lady' Meredith". Vancouver Sun, May 1, 2004. and Cate in Paradise Falls.
Henry Woodward (c. 1646 – c. 1690), often referred to as Dr. Henry Woodward, was the first British colonist of colonial South Carolina. He established relationships with many Native American Indians in the American southeast.
Drummond died at Seaview Cottage, Drummond Cove, in 1906. He was the third-last surviving colonist to arrive on the Parmelia, the others remaining being his sister Euphemia Macintosh, and Mary Ann Strickland (Hokin).
Through his Elliot grandfather, he was descended from Richard Treat, an early colonist from Wethersfield, Connecticut, and through his Foster grandmother, he was descended from the Girauds who emigrated from France with the Huguenots.
Montreal Gazette, November 15, 2003. In 2005, Napier conducted the first media interview granted by Karla Homolka after her release from prison."'It's time for me to talk'". Victoria Times-Colonist, July 5, 2005.
According to colonist William Strachey, "Pocahontas" was a childhood nickname meaning "little wanton"; some interpret the meaning as "playful one."Rountree, Helen C. (November 3, 2010). "Cooking in Early Virginia Indian Society". Encyclopedia Virginia .
"Here's to Victoria!: City plays itself in enchanting movie shot here two summers ago. At times you might catch yourself thinking the film was created by Tourism Victoria". Victoria Times-Colonist, August 24, 2001.
Israel Stoughton (c. 1603-1644) was an early English colonist in Massachusetts and a colonial commander in the Pequot War. Returning to England, he served as Parliamentarian officer in the First English Civil War.
1644), colonist in America,' Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. and four daughters also reached adulthood.(Thomas Stoughton), The Christian Sacrifice as set forth in Romans XII, 1,2 (1622), Postscript. British Library 4371, b.20.
Born and raised in Tuxtla Gutiérrez, Chiapas, Mexico."Mexico's Escamilla sings message of social justice". Victoria Times-Colonist, July 16, 2014. He began playing and making music in the early 1990s as a teenager.
Victoria Times-Colonist, March 24, 2018. the album Away Is Mine, which comprises the last songs Downie ever recorded and was completed by producer Nyles Spencer following Downie's death, is slated for release in 2020.
The Times Colonist gave a favorable review for The Skin I'm In, praising Fox for his honesty in the film and stating that the collaboration with Cook and Zulu was one of the film's highlights.
The river was named in 1861 during an expedition by explorer Francis Gregory, after Swan River colonist John Wall Hardey, who was a family friend. Gregory had previously named the nearby Mount Wall after Hardey.
They released their self-titled album in 2001.Devlin, Mike (May 22, 2001). "Girls love Flannel Jimmy", Times- Colonist, p. C5. The band opened for Wide Mouth Mason and Colin James,Chambers, Robyn (August 2002).
These factors have led to recent international debates as to which nations can claim sovereignty or ownership over the waters of the Arctic.Shaw, Rob. "New patrol ships will reassert northern sovereignty: PM". Victoria Times Colonist.
Chrissy Steele was the stage name of Christina Southern,"Southern returns to normal state of mind". Victoria Times-Colonist, August 23, 1997. a Canadian rock singer active in the 1980s and 1990s."Woman of Steele".
Vancouver Sun, October 3, 2008. and taking over the neighbouring Fort Café in 2013.Darron Kloster, "Russell Books expands again; Canada's biggest used bookstore stretches to 16,000 square feet". Victoria Times- Colonist, February 23, 2013.
He was on board the tugboat Sea Lion during the Komagata Maru incident in 1914. He also worked for the Vancouver Sun and the Victoria Colonist. He wrote several books that popularized British Columbia history.
The Bounty Hunters are a distinct group from the Colonist aliens. Although all Colonist aliens are shape-shifters, the Alien Bounty Hunters readily take the shape of humans and are tasked with policing their plans and tracking down and eliminating any threats. The bounty hunters have green blood that contains a retrovirus which, when exposed to humans, is lethal. The alien blood can burn through most surfaces like an acid, and can kill a normal human if exposed for too long to its noxious fumes.
English colonist Robert Sanders and Dutch colonist Myndert Harmense Van Den Bogaerdt acquired the land from a local Native American tribe in 1686, and the first settlers were the families of Barent Baltus Van Kleeck and Hendrick Jans van Oosterom. The settlement grew quickly, and the Reformed Church of Poughkeepsie was established by 1720. The community was set off from the town of Poughkeepsie when it became an incorporated village on March 27, 1799. The city of Poughkeepsie was chartered on March 28, 1854.
James Dickie Robinson (October 21, 1840 – April 18, 1912) was a Canadian political figure who, in 1873, served from February 9 to April 15 as Mayor of Victoria, British Columbia.Daily Colonist Feb 10th 1873, Daily Colonist April 16th He was born in Ireland in 1840. Robinson is referred to as the "mysterious missing mayor" because of the scarcity of archival information regarding his term, which is recorded as being the shortest in Victoria's history. He also served as the Town Clerk for Victoria from 1884 to 1888.
Through his paternal grandfather Capt. David Ogden Jr., he was a direct descendant of colonist John Ogden. His maternal grandfather was Gabriel Lewis Thébaut of the island of Antigua. Ogden graduated from Princeton University in 1762.
Portrait of Ferd Kayser, published in the Launceston newspaper The Colonist in April 1888 Heinrich Wilhelm Ferdinand "Ferd" Kayser, (1833 – 12 October 1919) was the mine manager of Mount Bischoff Tin Mining Company for thirty years.
1 April 2004. Retrieved 22 August 2006. According to Brightman, her voice can reach an F6.Perusse, Bernard. Sarah Brightman: The original angel of music hits the high notes in "Symphony" , Times Colonist, 4 February 2008.
Joseph Allicocke (alternatively Joseph Allicock or Allicoke) was an American colonist possibly of mixed African and European descent, and an early leader of the Sons of Liberty during the protests against the Stamp Act of 1765.
Voir, June 14, 2018. and Le silence de troupeaux was longlisted for the 2018 Polaris Music Prize."A list of the 40 albums on the Polaris Music Prize long list" . Victoria Times-Colonist, June 14, 2018.
George Popham (1550–1608) was a pioneering colonist from Maine, born in the southwestern regions of England. He was an associate of English Colonizer Sir Ferdinando Gorges in a colonization scheme for a part of Maine.
Victoria Times- Colonist, January 6, 1994. Benmergui subsequently moved to CBC Newsworld, hosting the afternoon talk show Benmergui Live. The CBC subsequently developed another variety series, Rita and Friends, which began airing in the fall of 1994.
Sharp was one of its Captains and later an honorary member.'The Colonist', 27 November 1912 He was also a volunteer firefighter, a member of the Nelson Bowling Club, and had the reputation as an excellent cricketer.
William Powell (before 1586 - January 1623), was an early Virginia colonist, landowner, militia officer and member of the first Virginia House of Burgesses in 1619. He was one of the two representatives of James City County, Virginia.
88 By the early nineties, there were just a few dozen Italian colonists left. All were elderly and still concentrated in Mogadishu and its surroundings. The last Italian colonist, Virginio Bresolin, died in Merka in early 2010.
"Country bumpkin image dispelled in new album". Victoria Daily Colonist, Newspaper Archives. 27 November 1977 - Page 37 In the early 1980s he fronted the Claire Lawrence Band, which performed in western Canada."Impressive Ulrich garners new fans".
There were now of roadway in the Nature Park Trails, as well as reproductions of historic sites including the Colonist Farm, the Lumberjack Camp, the Trading Post, the Indian Campground, the Grand Trestle, and the Western Ranch.
William Spencer is sometimes erroneously conflated with William Spence (burgess), another early Virginia colonist who also lived on Jamestown Island.As in Tyler, Lyon Gardiner in "Spencer (Spence), William." Encyclopedia of Virginia biography. New York: Lewis Historical Pub.
He had a son who took the name Isaac Isaac according to the naming tradition of the time, and who witnessed the grant of 100 acres to his father by Sachem Mamanuah. Alderman had a wife named Kate, information which is only mentioned in a land transaction in the Portsmouth, Rhode Island deed book. For his service he was awarded 100 acres of land in Little Compton by Mamanuah, which he later sold to an English colonist. This transaction was recorded in the deed books of Portsmouth, as the English colonist was originally from there.
Walnut Valley Plantation was established in 1636 when William Newsum, Jr. was granted 550 acres of land in Surry County, Virginia. Newsum was an English colonist who had paid for eleven other colonists to travel to Virginia, a practice which carried the promise of land from the English Crown. For each person whose passage was paid, the colonist who paid for it would receive 50 acres of land. Out of the eleven people Newsum brought to Virginia, he is known to have married three (possibly four) of them.
In the 1870s, John Brough, who acquired this island adjacent to Sea Island, built a small house and farmed what became Brough Island. Hugh Boyd purchased the 210-acre property, but resold to John Errington, who dyked and drained the land in the 1880s. The Goodmurphy cannery, which opened in 1894,The Daily Colonist, 13 May 1894 was incorporated the following year as the Dinsmore Island Canning Co. by John Dinsmore, M.B. Wilkinson, W.D. Goodmurphy, and Caleb Goodmurphy.The Daily Colonist, 17 May 1895 The cannery presence renamed the location to Dinsmore Island.
Detail of statue atop memorial Hébert overcame the hardships and became the first Canadian to support his family from the soil. He imported from France the first ox to pull a plough in Canada, but unfortunately, the first plough did not arrive until a year after his death. Jacques Lacoursière noted that Hébert had many firsts. He was the first colonist of Quebec, first colonist to live off the land, his daughter Anne's marriage to Étienne Jonquet in 1617 was the first in New France, and he was the first lord of New France.
The campaign, which became known as the Black Line, was greeted enthusiastically by the colonist press. The Hobart Town Courier said it doubted settlers would need persuading "to accomplish the one grand and glorious object now before them".
Bean, through his mother, was descended from the First Families of Virginia, including colonist and land owner William Randolph. He studied medicine and anatomy and obtained a B.S. in medicine, followed by an M.D. in anatomy in 1904.
She moved with her family to Saltspring Island, British Columbia, in 2001"Robert Amos: Salt Spring art show a revelation". Victoria Times-Colonist, October 11, 2015. and teaches fiction at Vancouver Island University."The under-heralded Kathy Page".
Morphett at home with four daughters and a son; then in December 1855 with his wife, ten children and two servants.Perry, Dulcie. Sir John Morphett : a South Australian colonist of distinction Cummins Society, Nover Gardens South Australia, 1992.
It subsequently won the awards for Best Short Film at the 2010 Victoria Film Festival,"Defendor named best movie". Victoria Times-Colonist, February 9, 2010. the 2010 Inside Out Film and Video Festival,"Inside Out Film Festival winners".
Montreal Gazette, February 8, 2007. The novel was based on her own experience living and working in Tokyo as an English teacher."Don't wear room shoes to walk on the seamy side". Victoria Times-Colonist, July 30, 2006.
Victoria Times-Colonist, March 13, 2018. She has also had acting roles in the television series InSecurity and The Beaverton, and wrote for the television series SketchCom, Instant Star, The Ron James Show, InSecurity and The Dating Guy.
Colonial practices also spur the spread of colonist languages, literature and cultural institutions, while endangering or obliterating those of native peoples. The native cultures of the colonised peoples can also have a powerful influence on the imperial country.
Great Stirrup Cay is a Sloan, Gene (June 24, 2017). "Norwegian Cruise's private Caribbean isle gets a serious spruce up". Times-Colonist (Victoria, British Columbia). p. D5. island that is part of the Berry Islands in the Bahamas.
Alexander Tennant, born in Ochiltree, Ayrshire in 1772, was a leading British colonist in the Cape Colony of the Cape of Good Hope, an enterprising merchant, a brother to industrialist Charles Tennant and a friend of Robbie Burns.
John Bateman (1789 – 3 April 1855) was an early colonist at Fremantle. He was the postmaster, general store owner and an investor in the Fremantle Whaling Company. The suburb of Bateman is named after him and his family.
"Popular CBC radio host dies suddenly". Victoria Times-Colonist, November 22, 2004. His series The Performers ran on CTV and Turner Network Television. In the late 1980s, Grierson hosted The Arts Report, CBC Stereo's national morning arts newscast.
Bentall grew up in Calgary, the son of a Baptist minister."Barney Bentall brings Cariboo Express to Vancouver Island". Times- Colonist Mike Devlin November 17, 2016 His family owns Dominion Construction and the Bentall Centre, in downtown Vancouver, BC.
He is the only original Plymouth colonist with an extant portrait painted from life. This, along with portraits of Winslow's son and daughter-in-law, and various Winslow family artifacts, are in the Pilgrim Hall Museum, in Plymouth, Massachusetts.
Donna Dasko (born August 19, 1951) is a Canadian senator from Ontario. She was appointed to the Senate on June 6, 2018."Trudeau names pollster, former judge to Senate for Ontario and Quebec". Victoria Times-Colonist, June 6, 2018.
Plaque to Jacques Archambault, Church of Dompierre-sur-Mer. Plaque on the location of the first well dug on the island of Montréal by Jacques Archambault. Jacques Archambault (c. 1604 – February 15, 1688) was a French colonist in Montreal.
"Queer fear". Victoria Times- Colonist, March 21, 2005. Concurrently with the final season of Queer as Folk, he co-created and produced the Citytv dramedy series Godiva's in 2005."CHUM makes a deal with the devil for homegrown drama".
The Ellen was sailing from Mauritius to Hobart. The ship's position was given as .A pioneer settler, Colonist, Volume LXII, Issue 15326, 15 March 1920, Page 5 Those rescued were taken to Hobart, arriving there on 6 May 1853.
Outlooks takes aim at downtown Duncan . Victoria Times-Colonist, February 11, 2011. CKMO's transmitter shut down at March 4, 2012 at midnight, when its agreement with Rogers Media ended.Village Now: "Village 900 embraces evolution to digital", February 13, 2012.
The first recorded European colonizer was Christopher Columbus in November 1493. He chose the name that the economic powers of the world consider valid. First colonist arrived in 1648. In 1666, the church Notre Dame de l'Assomption was built.
Victoria Times-Colonist, July 15, 2016. Darren Wall received a Canadian Screen Award nomination for Best Visual Effects at the 4th Canadian Screen Awards in 2016."Local artists, productions up for screen awards". Winnipeg Free Press, January 20, 2016.
The film was a Canadian Screen Award nominee for Best Live Action Short Drama at the 1st Canadian Screen Awards."Meg Tilly honoured with Canadian screen award as best actress in a drama". Victoria Times-Colonist, March 4, 2013.
This time he put greater emphasis on Sooke Lake. Early in the following year, the council put the question of Sooke Lake to the ratepayers in a referendum.”The Referendum Bylaw,” The Daily Colonist, Jan. 12, 1908, p. 23.
Victoria Times-Colonist, October 12, 2013. he is the cinematographer and producer on most of her films as well as codirector of the films Long Time Running."Sneak peek of Hip documentary unveiled". Halifax Chronicle-Herald, June 9, 2017.
Hywel James Jones (4 March 1918 – 23 April 2003)Victoria, B.C., Canada: The Times Colonist, April 26, 2003: Obituary of Hywel James Jones was the 9thMemory BC Anglican Bishop of British Columbia, elected in 1980, and serving until 1984.
In the early 1890s, the Union Steamship S.S Eliza Edwards provided a daily Vancouver-Steveston-Ladner's Landing run.The Daily Colonist: 20 Sep 1891 to 12 Feb 1892 The Vancouver and Lulu Island Railway proposal included a connecting ferry to LadnerThe Daily Colonist, 1 Jan 1894 that never eventuated. During 1898–1900, the three times weekly CP Navigation Victoria-New Westminster schedule included Lulu Island and Ladner.The Daily Colonist: 26 Jun 1898 to 17 Jul 1900 The 45-passenger Sonoma ran twice daily Ladner-Steveston during 1905–1909.The Delta Times: 9 Sep 1905 to 18 Sep 1909 The replacement vessel from the 1910 summer, the New Delta, ran the route three times daily in the spring/summer, and twice daily in the fall/winter, until April 1914.The Delta Times: 26 Oct 1912 to 9 Apr 1914 However, dangerous ice floes sometimes temporarily cancelled services.
The Sydney Morning Herald, 16 March 1840, page 2 The Colonist newspaper reported rumours that Coates was related to Governor Sir George Gipps, and that Gipps had appointed Coates as the Colonial Secretary for New Zealand.The Colonist, 13 May 1840, page 2 Coates denied both rumours, stating that he had not had the honour of meeting the governor until after his (Coates') arrival in Australia.The Colonist, 16 May 1840, page 2The Australian, 14 May 1840, page 2 At 25 years of age, in July 1840, Coates arrived in New Zealand on the ship Chelydra.NZ Advertiser & Bay of Islands Gazette, 2 July 1840, page 4 Evening Post, 8 July 1922, page 11Shipping Intelligence Extracts Also arriving from England via Sydney on the Chelydra that day was Sarah Anne Bendall (1819–1892Auckland Council, St Stephens Cemetery Records) who subsequently became Mrs Coates in the second recorded wedding in Auckland.
Priscilla and John Alden depicted on a postcard Priscilla Alden (, c. 1602 – c. 1685) was a noted member of Massachusetts's Plymouth Colony of Pilgrims and the wife of fellow colonist John Alden (c. 1599–1687). They married in 1621 in Plymouth.
Untitled, Colonist, Volume XLVIII, Issue 11555, 5 February 1906, Page 2 Their last owner, William David Stoney Johnston, bequeathed them to Nelson City Council when he died in 1999. After restoration, the cannons and carriages were given to Council in 2005.
Adam Thoroughgood [Thorowgood] (1604–1640) was a colonist and community leader in the Virginia Colony who helped settle the Virginia counties of Elizabeth City, Lower Norfolk and Princess Anne, the latter, known today as the independent city of Virginia Beach.
Many residents were killed, and others ended up in Siberian prisons for up to 20 years. Some made their way to the Japanese home islands, where they were also treated as foreigners.Kuramoto, K. (1990). Manchurian Legacy : Memoirs of a Japanese Colonist.
One of Heinlein's stories written from a female perspective, with his typically strong, independent, capable (for this era) female protagonist. It effectively contrasts a traditional teenage romance story against realistically drawn details of everyday life as a colonist on the Moon.
Mount Grace is named after Grace (Sarah) Rowlandson, the daughter of Mary Rowlandson, a Puritan colonist of Massachusetts. Grace died after she and her mother were captured by Native Americans of the Narragansett Tribe during King Philip's War in 1676.
Dunk, also previously known as Starkicker and blue.bottle.fly., was a Canadian power pop band from St. Catharines, Ontario, who were active from the mid 1990s to early 2000s."New name means new approach for Dunk". Victoria Times- Colonist, November 25, 1999.
Robbie King (born Robert Glenn King; May 27, 1947 – October 17, 2003)Uncredited, B.C. musician helped create Motown sound. Victoria Times Colonist, October 22, 2003. Retrieved 2012-11-27. was a Canadian musician, associated with many national and international acts.
"The original low-carb diet". Times Colonist. Retrieved December 2, 2018. The Salisbury steak, his means of achieving this goal, is ground beef flavored with onion and seasoning and then deep-fried or boiled and covered with gravy or brown sauce.
By the first anniversary of the first landing fifteen more ships had arrived bringing the colonist population to 3,000. By 1876 the estimated population of the city and suburbs was around 23,000 with the number increasing to 44,000 by 1886.
The clubhouse at the Royal Victoria Yacht Club. Through the years, the club has hosted a number of regattas and sailing races, including a racing program for young sailors"Victoria sea cadets off to nationals". Times Colonist, April 7, 2015.
Oscar Lopez (born 1953) is a Chilean-Canadian guitarist,"Guitarist breaks traditional mould". Victoria Times-Colonist, December 9, 1998. whose signature style blends Latin and jazz styles."Acoustic Waves series draws new faces; The Arrogant Worms, Oscar Lopez among new performers".
He was speaker for the assembly from 1931 to 1933. Davie was defeated when he ran for reelection in 1933. He lived in Duncan. Davie wrote a chess column for the Daily Colonist in Victoria for a number of years.
Taylor died on the 14th of February 1872 at the Bonally mansion. His obituary claims he was "an old and respected colonist". Taylor's total asset worth at his demise was £23,105. He never married and did not have an heir.
In 1680, the English colonist Rev. John Danforth made a drawing of the petroglyphs, which has been preserved in the British Museum. His drawing conflicts with the reports of others and the current markings on the rock. In 1690 Rev.
Stones are cacti here, and red rubys are collectibles. Enemies include geologic hammers and Colt Woodsman revolvers. Hammers give 9 rubys when killed. The final level has a colonist wagon which turns cacti into rubys and cold woodsman revolvers into cacti.
Vancouver Province, September 9, 2012. In 2013, he published the book The Republic of Rock ‘n’ Roll: The Roaring ’80s from Curtis to Cobain."Former MuchMusic host Kim Clarke Champniss revisits '80s in new book". Victoria Times-Colonist, March 28, 2013.
A photograph exists of Alert at Esquimalt, British Columbia from 1867, and it is further attested to by the following extract from The Colonist newspaper: Alert paid off at Plymouth on 30 May 1868 and was placed in the Steam Reserve.
"City Buys Esquimalt Waterworks," The Victoria Daily Colonist, Aug. 6, 1925, pp. 1,3. Steel pressure pipeline, 1915 Until 1943 there had been no need for disinfection. In that year, however, Victoria was a marshaling point for both Canadian and American troops.
Over the next three years, several attempts to claim Goldstream water and/or expropriate or purchase the Esquimalt Water Works failed.E.g., “City Loses the Waterworks Case,” The Daily Colonist, Aug. 1, 1907. Adams was called upon for advice again in 1907.
Philip Kevin Paul is a Canadian poet. His debut collection Taking the Names Down from the Hill won the Dorothy Livesay Poetry Prize in 2004,"Lt.-Gov. award honours 'grand lady' of B.C. literature". Victoria Times-Colonist, May 2, 2004.
Victoria Times-Colonist, June 14, 2018. The band members are vocalist Bria Salmena, guitarist Duncan Hay Jennings, bassist Lucas Savatti and drummer Kris Bowering."Frigs is ready to move on from Toronto’s ‘Seattle moment’". The Globe and Mail, March 8, 2018.
Gibson, who was the publisher of a newspaper in Loup City, Nebraska called The Standard Gauge, accepted what was considered a "lucrative" offer from Jeffries to move to the new Zephyrhills and start the Zephyrhills Colonist a year later. Gibson had his entire plant shipped by rail to Zephyrhills, but the equipment arrived before the press plant itself was completed. So, for the first several months of its existence, the Colonist was written, composed and printed outside. The equipment would be covered each night while staff members would stand guard until the roof and walls were completed.
French colonists were given the special epithet thực dân (originally meaning colonist but evolving to refer to the oppressive regime of the French) in Vietnamese; it is still universally used in discussions about the colonial era. After the French were pushed out of Vietnam, those who collaborated with them (called tay sai – agents) were vilified. Those who left for France with the French were known as Việt gian (Viet traitors) and had all their property confiscated. Although anti-French feelings in Vietnam have abated, the use of words like thực dân (colonist) to describe the French is still common.
He sold Calvan to Petrofina in 1955 for $40 million and, while he continued to trade in oil and gas companies for several years, his focus returned to the newspaper business. Bell purchased the Victoria Times Colonist in 1959 for $750,000, and one year later built a plant to print both the Times and The Colonist, which he gained control of in 1953 for $1 million. In 1954, Bell acquired a controlling interest in the Lethbridge Herald. He had a habit of appearing unannounced at the offices of his papers, often to chat with the editors, but never told them what to print.
Hope was not experienced at controlling a carriage it slipped down into the ravine.The Colonist, 2 April 1897, p. 3 The bodies were found about one hour later, drowned in about four feet of water. The horse was none the worse for wear.
Students joined in craft and outdoor activities. In addition to students from colonist families, between 30 and 40 children boarded at the school in what was formerly a farmhouse. Next to the farmhouse, Stelton built an open-air dormitory. Their winters were cold.
His best finish is T-19 at the 2002 FedEx St. Jude Classic. After failing to get any noticeable results in the U.S., Gangluff returned to the Canadian Tour. He won the season's first event of 2013, the Times Colonist Island Savings Open.
Ici Radio-Canada, April 23, 2020. In 2020, it was selected for inclusion in the online We Are One: A Global Film Festival.Victoria Ahearn, "TIFF among festivals co-curating We Are One, which has several Canadian titles". Victoria Times-Colonist, May 26, 2020.
He is also the founder of Studio Ronin and the co-founder of Ronin Arts. His graphic novel Pathfinder is an adaptation of the film of the same name.Knight, Chris (April 14, 2007). "Native-Viking clash entirely visceral", Times Colonist, p. D12.
Col. Edmund Quincy I (1602–1636), known as "the Puritan", was an English settler, soldier, colonist, planter, landowner, merchant, and politician of Massachusetts Bay Colony in what later became the United States. He is notable as the progenitor of the prestigious Quincy family.
Trees of note include the Red Creek fir, the largest Douglas fir in the world, and San Juan Spruce, the former second largest Sitka spruce in the world.Knox, Jack. 2010. Peace in the forest an elusive goal in B.C. Times Colonist, May 20.
Together, they had four children: Margaret Judd, Kenneth Mackarness, Francis Collier, and Philip Burwell. In addition to his scientific publications, Goode wrote Virginia Cousins, a history of the Goode family he traced back to John Goode, a 17th-century colonist from Whitby.
Plunkett twice charged the colonist perpetrators of the Myall Creek massacre of Aboriginal people with murder, resulting in a conviction and his landmark Church Act of 1836 disestablished the Church of England and established legal equality between Anglicans, Catholics, Presbyterians and later Methodists.
Along with Hines, they continue to present workshops and courses in clown, movement, and physical comedy."Clown reveals what's behind greasepaint". Victoria Times-Colonist, October 2, 2003. Following the successful tour of Flux in 2002, the duo retired the act for several years.
Benjamin Church (c. 1639 - January 17, 1718) was an English colonist in North America. He was a military leader of the historic predecessor of the United States Army Rangers,John Grenier. The First Way of War: American War Making on the Frontier.
Arleen Lyda Paré (born 1946) is a Canadian writer. She has published three collections of poetry and two novels to date. Originally from Montreal, Quebec,"Poetry to warm the wintry soul; Writer's lifelong journey is all about learning". Times Colonist, December 27, 2008.
Surry County Courthouse lawn Chanco is a name traditionally assigned to an Indian who is said to have warned a Jamestown colonist, Richard Pace, about an impending Powhatan attack in 1622. This article discusses how the Indian came to be known as Chanco.
"Bay Centre sold to U.S. company: City landmark estimated to have fetched at least $90 million", Times Colonist, p. A1. and closing one block of Broad Street. The centre was initially a partnership between Eaton's and Cadillac Fairview.Gidney, Norman (February 28, 1997).
Their debut full-length album, Shiver, was released in 1994, and scored a significant modern rock hit with "Awaiting Eternity". The band toured Canada as a supporting act for Toad the Wet Sprocket and Jesus Jones,"Look". Victoria Times-Colonist, February 17, 1994.
Fur Trade is a Canadian indie rock band, consisting of Steve Bays and Parker Bossley of Hot Hot Heat."Steve Bays heats up with new band Fur Trade". Victoria Times-Colonist, June 28, 2013. The band has released one album, Don't Get Heavy.
Saint Monica"Ararat triumphs at Genies". Victoria Times-Colonist, February 14, 2003. and Bearded Ladies: The Photography of Rosamond Norbury,"About Face; Documentary follows Vancouver photographer Rosamond Norbury as she plays with the boundaries of gender identity". Vancouver Sun, August 13, 2015.
In June 1868 Tītokowaru's forces destroyed a colonist blockhouse at Turuturumokai, inland of Hawera. The colonial response was to send a large contingent to destroy Tītokowaru's stronghold. On 7 September 1868 the colonial forces were defeated with heavy casualties. The stronghold was then abandoned.
Times Colonist Garden City 10 km. Association of Road Racing Statisticians (29 April 2014). Retrieved on 3 November 2014. Another personal best came at the Grande Premio Brasil Caixa de Atletismo, where he won the 3000 metres in a meet record of 7:43.15 minutes.
Guelph Mercury, June 14, 2002. Born in Victoria, British Columbia, Spring spent much of her adult life in Cambridge, England, where she was a professor of sociology at Anglia Ruskin University.Stephanie Chamberlain, "First novel in running for prestigious award". Victoria Times- Colonist, August 21, 1995.
Delta dimidiatipenne is a widespread species which extends from Morocco through north Africa to Egypt and Somalia, throughout the Middle East, and east to India and Nepal. It is a recent colonist to the Canary Islands but it is now widespread in the archipelago.
Second ballot results, Colonist, Volume LIV, Issue 13294, 20 December 1911, Page 7 The papers of the time noted that Moffat's campaign had been a fair one centred solely on political issues. It also noted that this had enhanced his standing in the community.
Caramuru is a reference to Diogo Álvares Correia (c. 1475-1557), a Portuguese colonist who first lived with the Tupinambá people of Bahia. He later assisted Francisco Pereira Coutinho in founding Salvador da Bahia and in creating the first Portuguese colonial government in Brazil.
The fungus has been known to cause cutaneous and subcutaneous phaeohyphomycosis, and as a lung colonist in people with cystic fibrosis in Europe. In 2002, an outbreak of systemic E. dermatitidis infection occurred in women who had received contaminated steroid injections at North Carolina hospitals.
Samuel Penhallow (July 2, 1665 – December 2, 1726) was a Cornish colonist and historian and militia leader in present-day Maine during Queen Anne's War and Father Rale's War. He was the commander at Fort Menaskoux and was attacked during the Northeast Coast Campaign (1724).
He was a respected colonist, becoming the most influential man in the colony. He protected his fellow colonists from the severity of the officials and restrained the encomenderos (large landholders) greed. But his own desire for wealth and gold continued to live inside him.
William Sharpe (sometimes referred to as Sergeant Sharp(e) or William Sharp) was an early Virginia colonist who settled in the Bermuda Hundred area that became part of Charles City County, Virginia. He served in the Virginia House of Burgesses in Jamestown, Virginia in 1629.
After about 1620 there arose clear theological points at issue between English Puritans and other English Protestants. The future colonist Emmanuel Downing wrote to James Ussher in 1620 asking that the king should provide a definition.Hill, p. 21. There were also taxonomies of Puritanism offered.
Daniel Ferguson is a filmmaker whose credits include Wired to Win: Surviving the Tour de France, Journey to Mecca: In the Footsteps of Ibn Battuta and Last of the Elephant Men."Documentary explores Asian tribe's bond with elephants". Victoria Times-Colonist, July 9, 2015.
Baudoinia compniacensis is a sac fungus which has been observed on a variety of substrates in the vicinity of distilleries, spirits maturation facilities, bonded warehouses, and bakeries. The fungus is a habitat colonist with a preference for airborne alcohol, earning it the nickname whiskey fungus.
By 1869 it was evident that the spring and pond would soon be incapable of supplying Victoria’s growing population."Important if True," The British Colonist, Oct. 22, 1869, p. 3. Concerns were also expressed about the business practices of the Spring Ridge Water Company.
Ottawa Citizen, September 1, 1990. In 2009, a second airing of the program was added to the schedule of CBC Radio 2, the CBC's music network (now CBC Music)."CBC Radio 2 tweaks program schedule; Some depart, others added". Victoria Times-Colonist, June 4, 2009.
Raeside began drawing editorial cartoons for the Victoria Times Colonist in Victoria, BC in 1979. He occupied the editorial cartoonist position until 2015, when he was let go by the newspaper. During that time, Raeside's editorial cartoons were reprinted in hundreds of publications worldwide.
Victoria Times-Colonist, December 31, 2007. he is a member of the Saanich First Nation on Vancouver Island. He is a graduate of the University of Victoria. In 2019, Paul co-taught a writing course at the University of Victoria called A Sense of Place.
Tantieme was six lengths further back in third, just ahead of Sir Winston Churchill's five-year-old Colonist. The winning time of 2:29.4 was a new track record. Supreme Court never raced again and was retired to stud at the end of the season.
Garling senior was one of the first solicitors to come to Australia. In 1827 Garling took part in James Stirling's exploration of the Swan River, as the expeditions official artist. Among other things he painted View from Mount Eliza. The schooner "Colonist" near Fort Macquarie.
Smith died in Beverley in July 1931, aged 76. He had married Julia Edwards in 1885, with whom he had ten children. One of his daughters married James Mann, who was also a member of parliament."WORTH COLONIST PASSES", The Sunday Times, 12 July 1931.
"Sarah Polley's flight from fame: Actress directs to fight depression". Ottawa Citizen, November 8, 2002. The film won the Genie Award for Best Live Action Short Drama at the 23rd Genie Awards in 2003,"Ararat triumphs at Genies". Victoria Times-Colonist, February 14, 2003.
Their only daughter Mary Kittamaquund became a ward of the English governor and of his sister-in-law, colonist Margaret Brent, both of whom held power in St. Mary's City and saw to the girl's education, including learning English. At a young age, Mary Kittamaquund married the much older English colonist Giles Brent, one of Margaret's brothers. After trying to claim Piscataway territory upon her father's death, the couple moved south across the Potomac to establish a trading post and live at Aquia Creek in present-day Stafford County, Virginia., Appomattox History, accessed 22 Apr 2010 They were said to have had three or four children together.
It was soon bought out by the rival Daily British Colonist (today the Victoria Times- Colonist), which had been founded by De Cosmos. There Robson served as political editor for six years, and became a passionate advocate for the colony's union with Canada, formed as a confederation of four colonies of British North America on 1 July 1867. Together with De Cosmos and Robert Beaven (also future premiers), Robson founded the Confederation League which lobbied Seymour, as well as London and Ottawa, for British Columbia's entry into Confederation. Robson's advocacy eventually paid off when British Columbia was admitted as the sixth province on 20 July 1871.
13th Floor is the debut album from Canadian hip hop artist Haviah Mighty. The album was released on May 10, 2019, and was the winner of the 2019 Polaris Music Prize.David Friend, "NewsAlert: Haviah Mighty wins Polaris prize for '13th Floor'". Victoria Times-Colonist, September 16, 2019.
During the 2004 Canadian federal election, controversy erupted over Layton's accusation that Liberal Prime Minister Paul Martin was responsible for the deaths of homeless people because he failed to provide funding for affordable housing.Aubry, Jack. "Layton's line starts a storm." Times – Colonist. May 28, 2004, p. A4.
207Higginson, p. 252Stanard, p. 94 and a descendant of William Randolph, a colonist and land owner who played an important role in the history and government of the Commonwealth of Virginia. He and his wife, Mary Isham, are referred to as the "Adam and Eve" of Virginia.
Friedrich Armand Strubberg (born Fredèric Armand Strubberg, March 18, 1806 – April 3, 1889) was a merchant, physician, and pioneer colonist. Born in Germany, Strubberg spent many decades in the United States. In Texas, he used the pseudonym Dr. Friedrich Schubbert. He designed the Vereins Kirche in Fredericksburg.
Encyclopedia of Newfoundland and LabradorNewfoundland Liberals gain riding: [ONT Edition] (CP). Toronto Star [Toronto, Ont] 20 Feb 1991: A11. Oldford was deputy speaker of the legislature in 2000, when he resigned due to health reasons.Deputy speaker resigns: [Final Edition] Times - Colonist [Victoria, B.C] 29 Mar 2000: A9.
A resident of Charlottetown, Labrador,"Labrador riding remains Liberal stronghold after provincial byelection" . Victoria Times-Colonist, June 25, 2013. Dempster has worked as an employment counsellor and as a municipal Councillor in Charlottetown, including serving as the town's deputy mayor. Dempster is a member of NunatuKavut.
McKay, Alexander Gordon. Houses, Villas, and Palaces in the Roman World. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1998. Print. Elizabeth Fentress suggests that the differentiation in house size between the smaller plots in this block and those clustered around the forum is due to a colonist class distinction.
Captain Baltasar Fernandes (also spelled Baltazar or Balthazar) (c. 1580 - c. 1667) was a Portuguese colonist of Brazil who led the expeditions called Bandeirantes into the interior seeking gold, silver, and iron. He was the founder and one of the first settlers of Sorocaba in 1654.
In July 1826 his headquarters, Gonzales, was burned to the ground in a Comanche attack. All but one colonist escaped to San Felipe. They returned to rebuild their colony the following year. For protection, the political chief of the region granted the community a small cannon.
Victoria Times-Colonist, September 7, 2018. and for the Burt Award for The Journey Forward, a compilation of two novellas co- written with Richard Van Camp."Cherie Dimaline's The Marrow Thieves among finalists for $10K CODE Burt Award for Indigenous YA literature". CBC Books, September 20, 2018.
Katherine Marbury Scott (born approx.1607-1610, died 1687) was a Quaker advocate and colonist of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Like her older sister, Anne Hutchinson, she was persecuted by the Puritans when her open opposition to Puritan authorities disturbed the patriarchal order of the colony.
May 1984. Ran from Toronto to Ottawa (450 km) for the 24-hour Race. December 1984. Ran from Victoria to Port Hardy (500 km) for Times Colonist 1000 Fund. February 1985. Ran the Trans Canada Highway, Yellowhead route via Prince Rupert and Edmonton to Ottawa (4740 km).
The group supported itself through timber harvesting and grew to 150 colonists. Socialist Gerald Geraldson and Gronlund supplied outside financial aid as well. The colony dissolved in January 1892 between a government land suit, colonist factionalism, and difficulties with Haskell's personality. Haskell died in California in 1907.
Today these immigrants are known as the New England Planters, planters being an old word for colonist. Lunenburg was raided in 1756 by Mi'kmaq and allies, and afterwards. The attacks continued on the British with the Lunenburg Campaign of 1758. Hostilities with Mi'kmaq ended around 1760.
Thomas Morton (c. 1579–1647) was an early colonist in North America from Devon, England. A lawyer, writer and social reformer, he was famed for founding the British colony of Merrymount, located in what is now Quincy, Massachusetts, and for his work in studying Native American culture.
In 1998, he released a cover of "To All the Girls I've Loved Before", sung in the voice of Bill Clinton."Here say". Victoria Times-Colonist, February 3, 1998. He was bumped from his on-air role with CFAX in 1999,"Belfry's Two just too much".
"Quality evident in Giller nominations: Canadian authors recognized internationally for originality". St. Catharines Standard, October 17, 1998. She has since published the novels A Rhinestone Button (2002),"Words, images woven with skill: Author describes everyday life in small rural community". Victoria Times-Colonist, December 15, 2002.
Acres of Lions was selected as one of the Top 20 artists in British Columbia in the 2010 and 2011 Peak Performance Project, where they placed 5th in 2011. In November 2010, the Times Colonist newspaper named them one of the Top 10 Bands in Victoria.
They garnered radio and MuchMusic airplay for singles such as "Rootbeer & Licorice" and "We Still Talk"."Maritime swing band has pop attitude". Victoria Times-Colonist, January 29, 1999. "Rootbeer & Licorice" charted on the Adult Contemporary charts in RPM, peaking at #32 the week of January 11, 1999.
Mary S. Wilson, Rootsweb. The second wife of Hon. Robert A. Harrison, U.C.L., Chief Justice of Ontario, was Kennithina Johana Mackay, daughter of Hugh Scobie, editor of the British Colonist. The couple had one daughter, Justine A. Harrison, who was born in Toronto, and educated, mainly, abroad.
Victoria Times-Colonist, August 16, 2019. Prior to the move, Russell Books claimed to be the largest independent used bookseller in Canada, with their locations containing over 1 million volumes. They hoped the new location would allow them to increase their inventory to 1.25 million volumes.
Knight grew up in Victoria, British Columbia. Prior to forming his own musical project in 2008, Knight was a member of the bands Maurice, Toco & Jorge, Vegan Holocaust, and Counting Heartbeats.(November 28, 2010). "Introducing our Top 10 acts from Mile Zero", Times Colonist, p. D6.
Beinart, W. and Wotshela, L., 2003. Prickly pear in the Eastern Cape since the 1950s-perspectives from interviews. Kronos, pp. 191–209. Van Sittert, L., 2002. ‘Our irrepressible fellow-colonist’: the biological invasion of prickly pear (Opuntia ficus-indica) in the Eastern Cape c. 1890–c. 1910.
Moose Jaw Times-Herald, March 10, 2000. He had a number of television roles as a child actor, appearing in 9B, Degrassi High and Our Hero, before starting to perform around Toronto, Ontario as a singer."Visiting Tory Cassis has moxie". Victoria Times-Colonist, October 8, 1999.
It flows through Connecticut and Massachusetts.Granville State Forest, Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation. The river is a main feature of Massachusetts's Granville State Forest where it drops in . It is named for Samuel Hubbard, the English colonist who first came to the area in 1749.
The letter was signed by Tla-o-qui-aht and environmental groups Friends of Clayoquot Sound, Living Oceans Society, David Suzuki Foundation, Georgia Strait Alliance, Wilderness Committee, T. Buck Suzuki Foundation and Greenpeace.Lavoie, Judith, (October 18, 2012). Clayoquot Sound fish farm approval sparks lawsuit threat. Times Colonist.
Dervall was the one but youngest of a family of 14 children of Aagtje Huijgens (c. 1599–1652) and Frans Jorisz Derval (c. 1596–1669), who married in February 1624 in Amsterdam. His brother Joris (born 1631) was in 1671 a colonist in Torarica, in Suriname.
McIntyre supervised the training of the first locally trained Presbyterian minister (J.S. White, ordained by the Synod of Australia in 1847). He edited Lang's newspaper The Colonist during the latter's absence overseas in 1839-40. He conducted a fortnightly paper, The Voice in the Wilderness (1846-1852).
There were pre- European Maori settlements in this area and the Bay's name dates from those times. The primary Ngāti Koata settlement in the area was at Whangarae, adjacent to Okiwi Bay on the western side of Goat Hill.The Croixelles Maori School, Nelson Evening Mail 14 November 1904 Page 2 In 1880 50 acres was leased by the Crown to Alabby Hobbs.Government Notices, Page 2 Advertisements Column 5, Colonist, VOLUME XXIII, ISSUE 2700, 6 May 1880 A saw mill was opened in the 1890s by Messrs Mace and Holland who had lease 3,200 acres of Maori land.New mail service, The Colonist, Nelson, Thursday, January 10, 1895, page 2Tenders, Colonist, page 2, 19 January 1898 A track to the Rai Valley was made in 1895.Pelorous Guardian and Miners Advocate, 22 January 1895 By 1904 Okiwi Bay had become a popular destination for holiday makers,The contraband of war question, Nelson Evening Mail 28 September 1904 Page 2 In 1957 a unique patu was uncovered while excavating a load of single from a beach in Okiwi Bay.
At the hospital, Implementation leader Jesus Pietro Castro has been interrogating Polly. Specifically, he has been enraging her by explaining the situation; first, he reveals that Implementation permitted the Sons of Earth to exist solely as a constant source of organ donors - thinning it periodically as if it was a herd of husbanded animals. Second, his "father" was over seventy when he was conceived, and required supplementary testosterone; instead of periodic injections, he chose to be transplanted with the testicles of an executed Colonist - the class schism between Colonist and Crew means that the two have effectively become distinct races, both of which consider miscegenation a greater taboo than incest - and the revelation that Jesus is half-Colonist disgusts her even more than the revelation that she and her fellow Colonists are nothing but cattle to the Crew; cattle that have just been completely culled. As the ramship cargo has sharply banked the need for organ transplants, the decision was made to eliminate the resistance entirely, knowing that they would revolt violently once the cargo was revealed.
In July 1826 Francis Berry and his family became the first family to reside in the Dewitt Colony. In July 1826 Gonzales was raided by Indians who were looking for horses. One colonist, John Wightman, was killed in the raid. Most of the settlers fled temporarily to Austin's colony.
Zephyrhills News logo c.2004The Zephyrhills News, located in Zephyrhills, Florida, United States, is a weekly broadsheet newspaper located in Pasco County just north of Tampa. It is the second oldest business still in operation in the city, founded in 1911 as the Zephyrhills Colonist. It publishes every Thursday.
Elanor Allerton (born March 30, 1639) was a notable colonist who became a victim of the Indian attacks around the original Jamestown settlement in the time leading up to Bacon's Rebellion. She became an important figure in history when her diary was discovered during the excavation of Jamestown.
The Jacko hoax was a Canadian newspaper story about a gorilla supposedly caught near Yale, British Columbia in 1884. The story, titled "What is it?, A strange creature captured above Yale. A British Columbia Gorilla", appeared in the British Columbia newspaper the Daily Colonist on July 4, 1884.
The Nelson Mail is a 4-day a week newspaper in Nelson, New Zealand owned by media business Stuff Ltd. It was founded in 1866 as The Nelson Evening Mail; the first edition was published on 5 March 1866. It absorbed another local paper, The Colonist, in about 1906.
The word "colony" comes from the Latin word . This in turn derives from the word , which means colonist but also implies a farmer. Cologne is an example of a settlement preserving this etymology. Other, less obvious settlements that began as Roman colonia include cities from Belgrade to York.
The Abbot-Baker House is a historic house at 5 Argilla Road in Andover, Massachusetts. Estimated to have been built about 1685, it is one of Andover's oldest houses, supposedly built by a third-generation colonist. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
Elizabeth "Betty" Washington Lewis (June 20, 1733 – March 31, 1797) was an American colonist. She is considered a "founding mother" of America.Harry Clinton Green and Mary Wolcott Green, The Pioneer Mothers of America, pages 72 through 78 (1912: G.P. Putnam's sons), found at Google books. Accessed February 19, 2008.
Hannibal Hawkins Macarthur (16 January 1788 – 21 October 1861) was an Australian colonist, politician, businessman and wool pioneer. The nephew of John Macarthur and son-in-law of former New South Wales governor, Philip Gidley King, he was well-connected in the early colony of New South Wales.
Alfredo Wiechers Pieretti himself designed the house. He was the son of a German colonist and his Corsican wife. He was born in Ponce and educated at the Paris' L'Ecole Spéciale d'Architecture. He lived for six years in Barcelona while working at Enric Sagnier i Villavecchia's distinguished studio.
Carter's great-grandfather, Thomas B. Carter, owned a large tobacco plantation in what is now Wentworth. The birthplace of J.P. Carter's father on the Carter Plantation. His family descends from the colonist Reverend Thomas Carter, a Puritan minister in the Massachusetts Bay Colony and signer of the Dedham Covenant.
The Crown reimbursed just £2,400 to local chiefs. In 1848, the first colonist ships arrived in the Dunedin area. In 1855 John Sidey purchased a large area of land stretching from the Caversham Hills (modern day Corstophine, Calton Hill) to Mount Grand/ Kaikorai Hill 4km away above Kaikorai Valley.
Rod Sanderson VisserVancouver Island Ridings: North Island: [Final Edition] Times - Colonist [Victoria, B.C] 19 Apr 2001: A4. is a Canadian former politician. Visser served as a BC Liberal Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia from 2001 to 2005, representing the riding of North Island.BC Votes 2005. cbc.ca.
Glacier owns community newspapers and websites in British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan. Glacier purchased its largest newspaper, the Times Colonist of Victoria, British Columbia, in an $86.5 million deal in 2011. The deal included other newspapers formerly held by Postmedia Network. Other daily newspapers include Alaska Highway News.
A neighborhood and an elementary school in present-day Scarsdale, New York are named after Heathcote. A marble statue of him stands atop the Surrogate's Courthouse (former Hall of Records) at 31 Chambers Street in Manhattan.Fox, Dixon Ryan, Caleb Heathcote, Gentleman Colonist, New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1926.
Daniel Denton (c. 1626 – 1703) was an early American colonist. Denton led an expedition into the interior of northern New Jersey. He was one of the purchasers of what is known as the Elizabethtown Tract in 1664, in the area of (and surrounding) present day Elizabeth, New Jersey.
Paré was educated in social work and adult education, and worked in social services in Vancouver, British Columbia for much of her professional career."Who says bureaucrat's life is a waste of time?; Arleen Pare used her experience to produce a prizewinning book". Victoria Times-Colonist, November 30, 2008.
Bodea, pp. 8–9 His fifth child, Iosif, who worked his entire life as a miner, married a Rozalia Krupiczer of Cavnic. Her father was a Slovak colonist to the region.Bodea, p. 9 Gheza was born on February 28, 1913 at Nagybánya, as Baia Mare was then known.
Her crew had deserted her in Cloudy Bay, New Zealand."SHIP NEWS". Colonist and Van Diemen's Land Commercial and Agricultural Advertiser 15 July 1834 Page 2. While Mary Elizabeth, Lovatt, master, was at Cloudy Bay the local Maori took her boat, gear, dead whales, and whatever else they could.
Pierre Houle is a Canadian film and television director. He is best known for the 2004 film Machine Gun Molly (Monica la mitraille), for which he garnered a Genie Award nomination for Best Director at the 25th Genie Awards."Genie nominees reflect diversity". Victoria Times-Colonist, February 9, 2005.
In January 1839 The Colonist ran an editorial announcing the school would re-open on 10 January when McEachern, through some unspecified "recent arrangements" that he had made, would be able to accommodate a larger number of boarders than hitherto: Under the domestic management of Mrs. McE, together with the substantial comforts derivable from the farm, with its dairy and excellent garden, we should think that the Summerhill Academy ought to be one of the most eligible establishments for the education of youth in the southern districts of the colony.The Colonist 8 September 1838.2 January 1839.The Sydney Herald, 21 November 1838 Two months later the property was again on the market.
The number of passengers was first reported as 16 – possibly because only the adults were counted. Later reports ranged from 30 to 50 passengers. The list from the Colonist names 30.Shipping Intelligence, p. 2, “Colonist”, 28 June 1877 ‘’Saloon:’’ Mrs J Gibbs, Mary Gibbs, Richard Gibbs, Louisa Gibbs, Frederick Gibbs, Sidney Gibbs, Ellen J Gibbs, John H Gibbs, Henry E Gibbs, Lucy F Gibbs, C J Beckett, Earnest Catt, W A Whyte, H Hartle, Dr Maunsell, Mary Maunsell, Mirial Maunsell, Eily Maunsell, Eva C Fosberry, Emma Fosberry, and H H Hilliard. “Steerage:” Elizabeth Pearce, Mary A Sanders, Charles W Cheel, Eliza Cheel, Elizabeth Cheel, Grace Cheel, Diana Cheel, William Cheel, and Ann Cheel.
Pierre Dalphond (born May 1, 1954) is a Canadian lawyer and jurist who currently serves as a Canadian senator from Quebec (De Lorimier). He was appointed to the Senate on June 6, 2018."Trudeau names pollster, former judge to Senate for Ontario and Quebec" . Victoria Times-Colonist, June 6, 2018.
Alfred Walter Toone (May 14, 1916 - November 15, 1966) was a Canadian politician, who served as mayor of Victoria, British Columbia in 1966. He died in office of a heart attack.Victoria's 43rd mayor looked at big picture: [Final Edition] Wilson, Carla. Times - Colonist [Victoria, B.C] 31 Mar 2002: C1 / FRONT.
He was a mixture of black and white. Andrew served as a coachman and a body servant to Jonathan. Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts (S.P.G.) was an organization that cared for British colonist in religious matters and to support the religious needs of indians and slaves.
Page 4 Advertisements Column 3, Colonist, Volume XIII, Issue 1305, 29 March 1870, Page 4 While in London Adams married Harriette Frances Leadam, on 27 July 1869. In 1878 Adams acquired a half-share in the Tarndale run from the Nathaniel Edwards. He later acquired the other half from John Kerr.
His 1996 Grace won the Theatre BC National Playwriting Competition,"Victoria playwright wins national award". Victoria Times-Colonist, September 25, 1996. and has been produced across Canada and internationally. During this era, he also wrote a number of short one-act plays, including Wake No Clocks"Art gallery marks AIDS Day".
244-270 He was the younger brother of David Davidse Schuyler, also a mayor of Albany. His paternal grandparents were Pieter Tjercks Van Schuylder and Geertruyt Philips and his uncle was Philip Pieterse Schuyler (1628–1683), the prominent colonist landowner. Through his uncle, he was first cousins with Gertruj Schuyler (b.
A colonist car or emigrant car was a special sleeping car designed to take immigrants from ocean ports to settlement areas in western North America at the cheapest possible fare. They offered simple sleeping berths and a cooking area for immigrants who were expected to bring their own food and bedding..
Bonnie Bowman is a Canadian writer, who won the Three-Day Novel Contest in 1999"Author met deadline by skin of her teeth". Victoria Times-Colonist, September 10, 2000. and the ReLit Award for Fiction in 2000"ReLit winners named: Inaugural year for literary award". The Telegram, June 17, 2001.
He began pursuing music as a career, initially as an electric guitarist in a rock cover band"Finger Pickin' Good: Incendiary guitarist Oscar Lopez plays string of concerts on Vancouver Island". Victoria Times-Colonist, January 25, 2001. before starting to perform as a Latin-style acoustic guitarist."Guitarist plays with passion".
Robin Sharma is a Canadian writer, best known for his The Monk Who Sold His Ferrari book series."Why millions go to this man for advice; Robin Sharma offers simple rules to live by. The hard part is living up to them every day". Victoria Times-Colonist, November 29, 2011.
The John B. Russwurm House is an historic house at 238 Ocean Avenue in the Back Cove neighborhood of Portland, Maine. Built about 1810, it was the residence of American abolitionist and Liberian colonist John Brown Russwurm. The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1983.
University of California Press; 1995. . p. 133. She intended to visit the Hopi mesas where Akin intended to establish an artist colony for a couple of months of a tour of the western United States. When she got off the train she realized that she was the lone art colonist.
Lapp was born and grew up in Prince George."Lapp happy to lend a hand". Mike Devlin, Times Colonist, December 18, 2012 His mother was a pianist. He learned to play the violin from his grandfather, beginning at age nine."It’s a treat to tap your feet to the fiddler’s beat".
Camosun College has five sports teams (all called the Chargers): men's basketball, women's basketball,"Camosun Chargers edged out in championship game". Times Colonist, March 3, 2018 men's volleyball, women's volleyball, and men's golf. There is also a curling team."Names and Games: Camosun College curlers make rare trip to nationals".
"Moms turn attention to teens". Victoria Times-Colonist, August 5, 2006. In 2009, the group staged Mom's the Word: Remixed, a show which mixed material from both of the earlier shows."Moms keep grown-up kids on edge; 'Scared about what we'd say about them; mad we didn't say enough'".
Alan Woo is a Canadian writer, who won the Christie Harris Illustrated Children's Literature Prize in 2013 for his debut book Maggie's Chopsticks."Gaston among B.C. Book Prizes winners". Victoria Times-Colonist, May 5, 2013. His second children's book David Jumps In was released by Kids Can Press in March 2020.
The True Colonist (Hobart) 24 February 1836, p.2. Some of the ships were used as bay whalers in the winter months. He operated a number of shore-based whaling stations in Tasmania, and his brothers did the same at Twofold Bay. Alexander had one or two pastoral properties in Tasmania.
In 2016 McAllister presented a talk, "Conservation in Canada's Great Bear Rainforest" at the TEDxBrentwoodCollegeSchool event. McAllister's film Great Bear Rainforest: Land of the Spirit Bear, shot for IMAX and Giant Screen theatres, was released internationally in 2019."Photos: In search of the Spirit Bear". Times Colonist, February 15, 2009.
Tichenor was born in Newark in the Province of New Jersey. He graduated from Princeton University in 1775 and moved for a short while to Schenectady, New York where he studied law. He is a descendant of Martin Tichenor (1625–1681), an early colonist and original settler of Newark, New Jersey.
Although the Virginia Company ultimately failed financially by 1624, the colony eventually grew and prospered until achieving independence late in the 18th century following the American Revolutionary War. Sandys' brother Thomas Sands (Sandys) was one of the first colonist in Jamestown, he survived the "starving times" and later returned to England.
Williams College is a private liberal arts college in Williamstown, Massachusetts, United States. It was established in 1793 with funds from the estate of Ephraim Williams, a colonist from the Province of Massachusetts Bay who was killed in the French and Indian War in 1755. Alumni of the college are listed below.
Some examples arise from reborrowing. For example, English pioneer was borrowed from Middle French in the sense of "digger, foot soldier, pedestrian", then acquired the sense of "early colonist, innovator" in English, which was reborrowed into French.The Oxford Guide to Etymology, by Philip Durkin, 5. Lexical borrowing, 5.1 Basic concepts and terminology, pp.
His widow remarried François Robin. In the Declarations of Belle-Ile-en-Mer, his grandson claimed Jean Pitre's origin as being Flemish. However, this evaluation has not currently been investigated by professional Acadian genealogists; and the name is still recognized as being of French colonist origin. The surname's pronunciation is not clear.
In 1602: New World, the sequel to Marvel 1602, Jameson is an Irish colonist and friend of Ananias Dare. He prints the Roanoke Colony's newspaper, The Daily Trumpet, with the assistance of Peter Parquagh, whom he orders to learn more about the mysterious "Spider", believing him to be a threat to the colony.
Baden-Powell's father was the Reverend Professor Baden Powell, a prominent mathematician and theologian, whose family originated in Suffolk. His mother was Henrietta Grace, daughter of Admiral William Henry Smyth whose earliest known Smyth ancestor was a Royalist American colonist; her mother's father Thomas Warington was the British Consul in Naples around 1800.
Times – Colonist. November 28, 2002, p. A7. Layton did not seek election to the House of Commons by running in a by-election, as is the tradition among new party leaders without a seat. Instead, he waited until the 2004 federal election to contest the riding of Toronto—Danforth against Liberal Dennis Mills.
Rice was born in San Jose, California, to Richard Eugene Rice and Marilyn Joyce (Cardoza) Rice. He is a descendant of 19th-century Azorean settlers in California and a direct patrilineal descendant of New England colonist Edmund Rice.Ancestry.com. California Birth Index, 1905-1995 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.
He also tried his hand at writing fiction. His two best known novels are, Arabin: or, The Adventures of a Colonist in New South Wales (1845), and, Frank Henly: or, Honest Industry Will Conquer, (1867).William H. Wilde, Joy Hooton & Barry Andrews, The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature, OUP, Melbourne, 1986, p.
Elizabeth Porter Gould was born in Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts, the daughter of John Averell Gould and Elizabeth Cheever (Leach) Gould. Among her New England ancestors were the schoolmaster Ezekiel Cheever, Massachusetts Bay Colony Governor Thomas Dudley, and colonist Zaccheus Gould. The family moved to Chelsea when she was a girl.
In 1676 a Virginia colonist, Nathaniel Bacon, rebelled unsuccessfully against the colonial government and his estate was forfeited. This was Curles, located near Turkey Island. Randolph made an assessment of the property for Governor Berkeley and was allowed to buy it for his estimated price, adding to Randolph's previous land holdings.Eckenrode, H.J. 1946.
Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville (; ; February 23, 1680 - March 7, 1767), also known as Sieur de Bienville, was a colonist, born in Montreal, New France, and an early, repeated governor of French Louisiana, appointed four separate times during 1701–1743. He was the younger brother of explorer Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville.
A group of about 120 men, women and children arrived in 1587. Shortly after arriving in this New World, colonist Eleanor Dare, daughter of Governor John White, gave birth to Virginia Dare. She was the first English child born in North America. Governor White returned to England later that year for supplies.
He died in 1589 and is buried in the churchyard of St Mary's church in the town. Richard Vines a colonist was born in the town in 1585. Francis Small, a landowner and trader who immigrated to New England was born in the town. Tobacco merchant John Davie was born here in 1640.
In 1999, Kane and Tom Hooper, the Grapes' main songwriting team, decided to work together again, and in 2000 released Field Trip under the Grapes of Wrath name."Grapes of Wrath get it together on Saltspring". Victoria Times-Colonist, September 26, 2000. Neither Chris Hooper nor Vincent Jones participated in the reunion.
Crêpe cakes are usually 15-30 layers, and the crêpes used are very thin and soft. Batters can also consist of other simple ingredients such as butter, milk, water, eggs, flour, salt, and sugar."Wrap it up in a crêpe; Thin pancakes work in savory or sweet dishes." Times-Colonist (Victoria, British Columbia).
Michael D. Reid / Times Colonist, October 19, 2017 as well as holding international festival workshops. He later founded the "House of Music" in Victoria BC. His trio with English accordionist Martin Green and Canadian guitarist Adam Dobres has become a regular performer at Glasgow's Celtic Connections Festival and Cape Breton's Celtic Colours.
Payne was born at Lower Sackville, Nova Scotia. She attended the Nova Scotia Community College in Truro, where she acted as a sports team mascot."Mascot gig opened door for comedian Nikki Payne". Adrian Chamberlain, Times Colonist, June 9, 2016 She then attended Humber School of Comedy and The Second City Conservatory.
Marriott who observed spiritualist mediums at séances detected many of them in fraud. He stated that he could produce by natural means all the effects produced by spiritualists.Anonymous. (1910). "Spiritualistic Frauds". Colonist, Volume LII, Issue 12771, 18 April, p. 4 Marriott had published four articles for Pearson's Magazine in 1910 exposing mediumship trickery.
He was educated in Bedford, England. Thomson came to British Columbia in 1893. He was a director of Turner, Beeton & Co., of the Colonist Printing & Publishing Co., of the Victoria Transfer Co. Ltd and of the Silicon Brick Lime Co. Ltd. Thomson served as whip for the Conservative Party in the assembly.
Daniel Denton (born November 14, 1973),Devlin, Mike. "Going solo", Times- Colonist, 2005-08-23, p. B5. better known by his stage name Moka Only is a Canadian underground hip hop artist. He has won 3 JUNO Awards, 5 MuchMusic Video Awards, and has been nominated for 11 Western Canadian Music Awards.
King (1967) p.88 Fellow German colonist and veteran of the French Foreign Legion Augustus Buchel formed the First Regiment of Texas Foot Rifles, serving as its captain. Kriewitz was a co-founding member of the company of 80 volunteers. On May 22, 1846, the company was drafted into the service of Col.
Victoria Times-Colonist, October 17, 2007. at the 2013 Governor General's Awards for And the Birds Rained Down (Jocelyne Saucier, Il pleuvait des oiseaux);"Governor General Literary Award finalists announced". Vancouver Sun, October 2, 2013. at the 2014 Governor General's Awards for Guyana (Élise Turcotte);"The Governor General's Literary Awards 2014: The finalists".
Hastings was born in Leicester, Massachusetts, on July 24, 1816, to Simon and Betsey Hastings. He is a descendant of the 17th century Massachusetts colonist Thomas Hastings. He moved to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where he took part in the anti-slavery movement. In 1846, he moved to the Wisconsin Territory, settling in Geneva.
Rubens Apparizione di Romolo e Proculo, (17c.) National Museum of Wales, Cardiff Plutarch tells a more detailed tale of Romulus' death. He lists several alternative stories, and then the tale of his disappearance at the assembly. Proculus was a friend of the king. He was a Roman colonist from the city of Alba.
William Reid Waters Esq, JPEditorial, p. 2, "Nelson Evening Mail", 27 September 1877 (died 1881)Death of Mr W R Waters, p. 5, 'Colonist', 26 February 1881 was Mayor of Nelson, New Zealand from 1 September 1877 to 19 December 1877Editorial, p. 2, 'Nelson Evening Mail', 19 December 1877 and a City Councillor.
He developed the property as a tobacco farm, which he named Tories Vineyards.Johnson (1999), Africans in America, p. 44. Mary survived, and in 1672 she bequeathed a cow to each of her grandsons. Research indicates that when Johnson died in 1670, his plantation was given to a white colonist, not to Johnson's children.
The Ice Warriors are willing to kill every human colonist on Mars in order to reclaim it. And someone is threatening to disrupt the Web of Time for what they believe to be the greater good. The Doctor has to make a difficult choice. And his companion does not agree with him.
The full album was released on May 10, and was supported by her first extensive concert tour"Love comes, goes on Soul Run". Victoria Times-Colonist, May 19, 2016. and an advance appearance on CBC Radio One's Q."Tanika Charles covers Prince and takes centre stage with 'Soul Run'". Q, April 22, 2016.
See the Stamp Act, March 22, 1765, D. Pickering, Statutes at Large, Vol. XXVI, p. 179 ff (clause LVII relates to jurisdiction in admiralty). This power has been awarded because the Stamp Act was unpopular in America, so that a colonial jury would be unlikely to convict any colonist of its violation.
The second was a change in the labor policy so that instead of a colonist owning the labor of specific Indians, he would have a right to man-hours, to be carried out by no specific persons. This required the establishment of self-governing Indian communities on the land of colonists – who would themselves organize to provide the labor for their patron. The colonist would only have rights to a certain portion of the total labor, so that a part of the Indians were always resting and taking care of the sick. He proposed 12 other remedies, all having the specific aim of improving the situation for the Indians and limiting the powers that colonists were able to exercise over them.
By November the ketch had again returned from the wreck site with cargo from both the Colonist as well as the Douglas, and the scene was described as: > ...masts and yards as well as hull of the Colonist are as sound as the day > she was built. She has been thoroughly caulked from keel to covering board, > and is now quite tight, her rigging has been refitted and sails bent. The > tides have been very bad lately, but notwithstanding she has been floated > more than halfway over the reef; and Captain Paget, who remains with one man > at the reef, expects that she will be in deep water at the next spring > tides. The Douglas still remains with royal yards aloft.
Eretoka Island (Hat Island), Vanuatu at the entrance of Havannah Harbour where the murder took place, drawn by Philip Doyne Vigors, while serving in Naval vessel HMS Havannah. On 22 May 1889 whilst the Colonist was lying at anchor in Havannah Harbour in the New Hebrides Group the shipmaster William Greenless was shot and killed by the supercargo of the vessel Henry Ernest Weaver. > HMS Lizard was lying at Havannah Harbour at the time and a boat from her > went all to the Colonist upon the report of firearms on board being heard. > On boarding the schooner It was found that the captain had been shot while > lying in his berth, and the body subsequently carried up and laid on the > main hatchway.
A time capsule was ceremoniously buried. It included not only the congregation's constitution, a list of donors tho the building fund, some coins, and a copy of the local newspaper, the British Colonist, still publishing today as the Victoria Times-Colonist, but the full membership lists of the Germania Sing Verein and French Benevolent Society of Victoria. The dedication was marked by a procession of benevolent societies of what appears to have been every religion and ethnicity resident in the young city. The marchers in the procession are known to have included not only the Hebrew Benevolent Society, but the French Benevolent Society, the St. Andrew's Society, the Germania Sing Verein (a German Singing Club), and the Fraternity of Ancient, Free and Accepted Masons.
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (1986) pp. 504-507 "21 members of Parliament, representing each of the Indian states, issued a statement entitled a 'Timely Call to the Leaders of Today and Tomorrow' for the speedy introduction of the system [of TM] in the daily routine of national life." page 504 According to the Maharishi, news articles on the technique appeared in Canadian newspapers such as the Daily Colonist, Calgary Herald and The Albertan.Maharishi Mahesh Yogi (1986) pp. 530-536 "a front page news article in the local Daily Colonist newspaper, which had reported on the Parksville course and quote Maharishi..." page 533 The Students International Meditation Society (SIMS) began in Germany in 1964, was incorporated in the USA in 1965 and continues to function in some countries.
Jane Rolfe (October 10, 1650 – January 26-27, 1676) was the granddaughter of Pocahontas and English colonist John Rolfe, (credited with introducing a strain of tobacco for export by the struggling Virginia Colony). Her husband was Colonel Robert Bolling, who lived from 1646 to 1709. Robert and Jane had one son, John Bolling (1676–1729).
He was born to General Miguel Delgado Briceño (son of Santos Román Delgado Abreu and Abigail Briceño Gabaldón, whose grandparent was an Andalusian colonist) and Dolores Chalbaud Calderón (the daughter of José Antonio Chalbaud, a French immigrant, and Dolores Calderón Carrillo). He was the father of Carlos Delgado Chalbaud venezuelatuya.com, Román Delgado Chalbaud (born 1909).
The code prescribed capital punishment for any colonist who endangered the life of the colony by theft or other crimes. Dale's Code remained in force until 1618. Four centuries later, one scholar came up with a theory that it strongly influenced the justice system for decades afterwards, particularly in the governing and punishment of slaves.
Arrival of the ship Asterope from London, Colonist, Volume XV, Issue 1574, 22 October 1872, Page 2 Piper settled in Nelson, and ran the YMCA hostel on the corner or Bridge and Collingwood Street until 1883,Untitled, Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XVIII, Issue 238, 10 October 1883, Page 2 when he retired from business.
Plantation Palmeneribo (?) in Suriname by Dirk Valkenburg ± 1707 Joan or Johan van Scharphuysen, Scharphuizen or Jan van Scherpenhuizen (died 15 January 1699) was a Dutch colonist, a judge in Suriname, a slave-trader, colonial governor from 1689 to 1696 on behalf of the Society of Surinam, (Sociëteit van Suriname) and a considerable plantation-owner.
Decinea percosius, the double-dotted skipper, is a species of butterfly of the family Hesperiidae. It is found from Belize north to Mexico. It is an occasional colonist up to the lower Rio Grande Valley in Texas, US. The wingspan is . Adults are on wing from March to November in southern Texas and Mexico.
Zavala County was established in 1858 and named for Lorenzo de Zavala, a Mexican colonist and one of the signers of the Texas Declaration of Independence. The county was organized in 1858, with an error putting an additional “L” in the county. The mistake was not corrected until 1929. Batesville became the county seat.
From this point on, Frederick Taylor no longer received any trouble from his past. In fact, to all intents and purposes, he became a successful and respected colonist. He became rich trading cattle and other livestock products out of Port Albert, wrote letters petitioning the Superintendent and advised other squatters on sheep washing innovations.
In the late 1800s, the British seized control of Benin City, bringing with them their photographic traditions. British photographers depicted locals through the viewpoint of the colonist. The first photographs of Benin depicted defeated royal families in exile, burned palaces, and "punitive" expeditions. As the first indigenous royal court photographer, Alonge changed this narrative.
Casa Milà was built for Roser Segimón and her husband Pere Milà. Roser Segimón was the wealthy widow of Josep Guardiola, an Indiano or Americano, or former colonist returned from South America, had made his fortune with a coffee plantation in Guatemala. Her second husband, Pere Milà was a developer known for his flamboyant lifestyle.
John Brown (c. 1801 – 17 August 1879, Adelaide) was English colonist from London involved in the establishment of the British colony of South Australia. John was the son of Samuel Brown and Maria Josepha Robinson. He was educated for three years at Mill Hill School and subsequently became a vintner at St Mary-at-Hill.
Each colonial power has certain bonuses that make them unique and different from each other. Aside from European colonial powers, the NPC powers include eight Native American tribes, in four main categories. Each Native American settlement can convert one regular colonist into a specialist. More advanced tribes (Incas and Aztecs) live in larger cities.
"Victoria Scene of Destructive Fire," The Victoria Daily Colonist, Aug. 10, 1904, p. 1. A separate high-pressure system was built in the city using saltwater solely for fire protection. Work was also begun on a balancing reservoir on Smith's Hill, which was completed in 1909 and is now the location of Summit Park.
A young colonist by the name of Shun Nomonura is caught into the fray as he joins the rebels, dramatically affecting the lives of those close to him with his actions. A generational divide between the younger natural born colonists and their older compatriots arises as the allegiance to Earth as humanity's motherland is questioned.
Victoria Times-Colonist, April 7, 2011. and his debut collection Prologue for the Age of Consequence, published by House of Anansi Press, was a shortlisted nominee for the Governor General's Award for English-language poetry at the 2014 Governor General's Awards."Governor-General Literary Awards finalists unveiled". The Globe and Mail, October 7, 2014.
Smallpox spread from Spanish colonies in Florida to the Carolinas in the 16th century.Rudes, Blumber, and May 309 The population of the Cape Fear Indians was estimated to be 1,000 in 1600. A colonial census in 1715 recorded that they numbered 206. British colonist William Hilton observed 100 Indians at Cape Fear in 1662.
"Book research prompts her parents to remarry". Victoria Times-Colonist, September 18, 1998. Based on her own parents' early relationship, her process of researching the book led her parents to rekindle their romance after having divorced in 1981, and ultimately to their remarriage to each other. The book was a Giller Prize finalist in 1998.
Daniel Willard was born on January 28, 1861 to Mr. & Mrs. Daniel S. Willard in Hartland, Vermont, a small farm village. His mother died when he was five. On his father's side, he was descended from colonist Thomas Hastings who came from the East Anglia region of England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1634.
William John Sutton's influence on Vancouver Island is visible in the places named after him, such as Sutton Pass,Report of the Minister of Mines, 1926. Sutton Boulders, Lost Shoe CreekThe Colonist, 15 February 1903. and Sutton Rock;Scott, Andrew, 2009, The Encyclopedia of Raincoast Placenames, Harbour Publishing. as well as the Sutton Limestones.
Banger Films is a Canadian film and television production company, which specializes in films focusing on heavy metal music and culture."Religion, heavy metal collide". Victoria Times-Colonist, June 5, 2013. The company was launched in 2004 by Scot McFadyen and Sam Dunn to create and distribute their first film, Metal: A Headbanger's Journey.
This act authorized negotiations for the cession of unoccupied lands belonging to the Creek, the Seminole, and the Cherokee. Couch stopped being a colonist and became a lobbyist. Couch spent four years in Washington, D.C., trying to convince Congress to open the Oklahoma lands. Many Indians from the Five Civilized Tribes lobbied against Couch's actions.
Acoutsina (c. 1697 - after 1719), the daughter of Chief Ouibignaro, was an Inuk from Labrador who taught François Martel de Brouague, a French colonist and commandant of the coast of Labrador, the language of her people. The name "Acoutsina" is believed to be a French derivation of an Inuit term, akutsiarq, meaning the beautiful apron.
Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville (16 July 1661 – 9 July 1706 ) was a soldier, ship captain, explorer, colonial administrator, knight of the order of Saint-Louis, adventurer, privateer, trader, member of Compagnies Franches de la Marine and founder of the French colony of Louisiana in New France. He was born in Montreal of French colonist parents.
When Power and Hewetson failed to settle the required number of families, local rancheros were issued titles as colonists of Power and Hewetson. Garza was able to secure title to a league of his own land only as a colonist of these empresarios. Poyo (1996), pp. 113–116, "Finding Their Way" (Ana Carolina Carrillo Crimm).
American jockey Steve Cauthen made his British debut at the course in 1979 when he rode Marquee Universal to victory here. It was here in 1949 that Winston Churchill first raced Colonist II in the one mile Upavon Stakes. The horse won, and went on to win the Ribblesdale Stakes at Ascot later that year.
Valiente was born with another name in Western Africa. In 1505 he was enslaved and transported to Mexico. He was bought by Alonso Valiente, a Spanish colonist, who had him baptized as Catholic under the name Juan Valiente. When the senior man returned to Spain, he took the young slave with him as a servant.
275 Oxford has several historical links. It is the location Harold B. Lee, a future president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, taught school. It is also the location where Jefferson Hunt, a Mormon colonist died. Hunt is buried just behind the hill off the highway at Red Rock Pass.
The community was originally named Cootsville after colonist Andrew Jackson Coots. Settlers began moving in during the late 19th century. In 1879, Doctor William Flemon Cowan, and his spouse, midwife Mary Ann Primm Cowan, moved to the community from Limestone County. The plot of land on which they settled became the community of Katemcy.
Mary MacLeod McConnel was born in Edinburgh, the daughter of David Cannon McConnel, a colonist of Queensland, and Mary McConnel.; extracted quote on p. 112. She spent her formative years in Australia, at the family's sheep and cattle station in Cressbrook, and in Europe. As a young widow, she studied English literature at Oxford.
He named it Royal Spring but did not settle it.Kentucky Encyclopedia, p. 371. "Georgetown". University Press of Kentucky (Lexington), 1992. Accessed 26 July 2013. John McClellan was the first English colonist to settle the area and established McClellan's Station there in 1775, but the compound was abandoned following an Indian attack on December 29, 1776.
"Kumbaya road show hits town". Victoria Times-Colonist, October 2, 1996. The label wanted them to change their name because there was another band of the same name from Youngstown, Ohio, but Johnson and Orenstein resisted, since they were already well-associated with that name in Canada. As well, the label was going through financial difficulties at the time.
Hasenohr, E W. H. Gray A Pioneer Colonist of South Australia Adelaide 1977 – William Henry Gray (1808–1896)Mr W H Gray's will, The Advertiser (Adelaide) 8 September 1896 p.5 In 1885 the 100,000 acre lease was resumed for non-compliance with the conditions.Miscellaneous, "Notice of resumption", South Australian Register (Adelaide) 27 March 1885 p.
Figure 11.6. this species also occurs in eastern North America and is thought to be a relatively recent natural colonist in Europe. In the Americas, Eriocaulon is the only genus in its family that occurs north of Florida. They tend to be associated with wet soils, many growing in shallow water, in wetlands, or in wet savannas like flatwoods.
A 24-hour service was instituted from 1954. Scouring at the Ladner landing caused a collapse on the extension, and its relocation. At peak times, the ferry could make five round trips in two hours.The Daily Colonist, 24 May 1959 On the George Massey Tunnel opening, the Delta Princess made the final run on May 23, 1959.
The Colonists Lloyd's Register of British and Foreign Shipping 1867 entry The Colonist was a wooden vessel with iron bolts and with a felt and yellow metal skin. :Length: :Breadth: :Depth: She was rigged as a schooner although sometimes described as a brigantine. She was built by Denny & Rankine in their 140 yard at Dumbarton in 1861.
She came to prominence (as 'Miss Gail Collins') co-producing, with Pappalardi, the self-titled debut album by Energy, a group featuring Corky Laing.Russell Freethy, 'NOW... Meet Pappalardi, the Daddy of Them All!' Times Colonist (British Columbia) 1 Feb 1969 p. 7 She also co-produced, with Pappalardi, the Felix Pappalardi and Creation album in 1976.
Ralph Hunt was an early colonist in Long Island, New York. He was said to be born in London, England in 1613. The first record of him was when he arrived to Long Island in 1652 with a boat of Englishmen. He was an early leader in Middleburgh, where he served as a magistrate, freeholder, and later a Lieutenant.
Pocahontas Hall was built in 1931 and was named after the daughter of Powhatan, paramount chief of the Powhatan confederacy. She married English colonist John Rolfe, and they were ancestors to many descendants of First Families of Virginia. It serves as a residential hall for freshman women and female students transferring from other colleges and universities.
"Belgian movie wins top prize at Cannes ; Toronto's Egoyan misses ceremony when film shut out". Toronto Star, May 24, 1999. As a television director, his credits have included segments of The Kids in the Hall, and episodes of Alienated,"Sci-fi TV comedy filmed in Saanich opens on New VI". Victoria Times-Colonist, September 4, 2003.
Publishers included Cec Ramsden, John Farrington, Stan Butler and Bob McKenzie, and others. In the late 1990s, the newspaper became part the Southam Inc. chain, which itself was part of Hollinger Inc. This chain was, at the time, the dominant newspaper publisher in British Columbia, and also included the Alberni Valley Times, Times Colonist and several weeklies.
The Order of Merit title win gave Smith a five-year exemption on the Canadian Tour. After a winless 2008 season, Smith won his 3rd Canadian Tour event at the Times Colonist Open in 2009. He has also played on the Hooters Tour where he finished in the top-10 of the money list in 2004.
Creole culture is an amalgamation of French, African, Spanish (and other European), and Native American cultures. Creole comes from the Portuguese word crioulo; originally it referred to a colonist of European (specifically French) descent who was born in the New World, in comparison to immigrants from France.Delehanty, Randolph. New Orleans: Elegance and Decadence, Chronicle Books, 1995, pg.
The online ordering system extends into the Metro Vancouver area.Victoria grocers ready for Amazon delivery invasion Times Colonist October 31, 2013 10:02 PM The company has an annual scholarship program that gives out $1500 to 20 students that are part of the company's web, either directly or indirectly. Thrifty Foods is the largest private employer on Vancouver Island.
New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company, 1915. . Retrieved August 14, 2012. p. 233. was an early Virginia colonist, landowner, militia officer, county court clerk, county clerk justice and legislative representative (politician). He served at least two terms as a burgess in the Virginia House of Burgesses in the 1640s and 1650s representing Isle of Wight County, Virginia.
Last of the Elephant Men is a Canadian documentary film, which was released in 2015."Documentary explores Asian tribe's bond with elephants". Victoria Times- Colonist, July 9, 2015. Directed by Arnaud Bouquet and Daniel Ferguson, the film profiles the Bunong people of Cambodia, focusing in particular on their unique bond with the local population of elephants.
Horne travelled to Van Diemen's Land with his wife and two daughters, arriving in Hobart Town on 31 January 1830. He was soon engaged in local politics, opposing the governor, Sir George Arthur and editing the Colonist newspaper. Horne's life was marked by frequent descent into debt. At one point he admitted to losses of £22,000.
"Joel Plaskett, former Ottawan tie for two awards each; Chris McKhool's solo project takes cake". Ottawa Citizen, November 22, 2009. In 2010, he performed on the bill for APTN's Aboriginal Day Live concert,"Aboriginal Day Live is three events in one; Timing vital in co-ordinating performances from two sites". Victoria Times-Colonist, June 20, 2010.
14 On June 6, 1925 West Cajoot departed San Francisco for another trip to the Orient, arriving in Yokohama at the end of June. Leaving from Yokohama on June 30, she touched off at Yokaichi (July 1), Kobe (July 2)Oakland Tribune, July 10, 1925, p.45, Dairen (July 8)The Daily Colonist, July 10, 1925, p.
"Rock survivor". Victoria Times-Colonist, November 5, 1998. Following their breakup, their two EPs and single, plus unreleased live tracks, were re- released in 1995 on the album No Escape, with liner notes written by Buck Cherry."Seeds of Punk: In the late '70s and early '80s, Vancouver was hot and Buck Cherry and the Modernettes were there".
The 1995 Scott Tournament of Hearts Canadian women's national curling championship, was played February 18 to 26Victoria Times-Colonist, 17 Feb 1995, "Scoreboard" at the Max Bell CentreCalgary Herald, 18 Feb, 1995, pg D1, "Peterson & Co. winning ambassadors" in Calgary, Alberta. It was the first time the page-playoff system would be used at the Scott.
Victoria Times- Colonist, September 10, 2007. His family is of Polish origin. During high school, David performed in the musical group Saskatchewan Express, a touring youth show. In 2000, he graduated from the Canadian College of Performing Arts in Victoria, British Columbia. He then moved on to co-found the boy band 4Now, in which he played piano.
William Randolph I (bapt. 7 November 1650 – 11 April 1711) was an English American colonist, landowner, planter, merchant, and politician who played an important role in the history and government of the English colony of Virginia. He moved to Virginia sometime between 1669 and 1673, and married Mary Isham (ca. 1659 – 29 December 1735) a few years later.
Wanganui Chronicle, Whanganui, 29 June 1914 Princess Royal (Gavotte) (March?) c. 1899 "Papers Past" "Nelson Garrison Band" Colonist, Nelson, 15 December 1899. Queen of the Earth (Waltz) (March?) c. 1917 "Papers Past" "Woolston Band" The Press, Christchurch, 11 January 1917"Papers Past" "Lyttleton Marine Band" Sun, Christchurch, 11 January 1917 Possibly the same piece as Queen of the South.
Everest '82 is a Canadian drama film miniseries directed by Graeme Campbell and written by Keith Ross Leckie. It aired in the fall of 2008 on CBC television and was produced by Alberta Filmworks. The series is based on the 1990 book Canadians on Everest: The Courageous Expedition of 1982 by Bruce Patterson of the Times-Colonist newspaper.
Phelps was born in Auburn, New York, the son of Halsey and Lucinda (née Hitchcock) Phelps. He was descended from the puritan colonist, William Phelps. He studied at Auburn Academy and Auburn High School. In 1844, Phelps was appointed as a promising student from Cayuga County, New York to attend the New York State Normal School.
The album was named after the children's book with the same name. It was recorded when Calder was caring for her sick mother, and the project was put on hold when her mother died. A feature in Victoria's Times Colonist noted that the album features her mother's "spirit and influence, but not the sadness associated with her death".
Designated a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark in 1983, Marker number 10083. 201 S. Washington It is believed the original two-room fachwerk house was built between 1848 and 1850, by colonist Willis Wallace on land from the German Immigration Company. Heinrich Mueller Jr. later bought the home. His son-in-law A.W. Petmecky built a limestone addition in 1895.
It is now found commonly in all the states. In Canada, it is most common in the Maritime Provinces as well as southern Quebec, Ontario and British Columbia, with scattered populations in between.[], retrieved December 29, 2006. Great mullein most frequently grows as a colonist of bare and disturbed soil, usually on sandy or chalky ones.
Ripley finally escapes the planet with Corporal Dwayne Hicks, the android Bishop, and Newt, a young girl who is the last surviving colonist. Back on the Sulaco, they are soon attacked by the surviving Alien Queen, which is finally expelled into space by Ripley. Ripley enters into hypersleep alongside the three other survivors for the return to Earth.
I Wrecked My House is a Canadian home renovation reality series, which airs on HGTV."Rescuing wrecked houses; Victoria contractor plays starring role on new HGTV reality series". Victoria Times-Colonist, June 23, 2015. Hosted by Steve Patterson,"Too much funny for Twitter: Steve Patterson, host of CBC's The Debaters and HGTV's I Wrecked My House, performs at Showplace".
Kelling thus stepped back from the contest. Wemyss, who was away from the district for the month during the election campaign, had placed a long advertisement in The Colonist outlining his political opinion. This was published on 22 January 1861. The nomination meeting for the election was held at the school house in Stoke on Monday, 28 January 1861.
Since the decline and restructuring of the railroad industry began in the 1950s, the city's population has remained relatively constant. Although the two towns have been combined, separate school districts have been maintained (Las Vegas City Schools and West Las Vegas School District). The anti-colonist organization Las Gorras Blancas was active in the area in the 1890s.
Ananias Dare (c. 1560 - 1587, legal death) was a colonist of the Roanoke Colony of 1587. He was the husband of Eleanor White, whom he married at St Bride's ChurchSt Bride's: American Connections in London, and the father of Virginia Dare, the first English child born in America. The details of Dare's death are still unknown.
He was a direct lineal descendant of Elder William Brewster (pilgrim), (c. 1567 – April 10, 1644), the Pilgrim colonist leader and spiritual elder of the Plymouth Colony and a passenger on the Mayflower. They were the parents of Kingman Brewster, Jr., (June 17, 1919 – November 8, 1988) an educator, president of Yale University, and American diplomat.
"Maudie leads the way at Canadian Screen Awards". Victoria Times- Colonist, March 13, 2018. At the 7th Canadian Screen Awards in 2019, the troupe again won the award for Best Writing in a Variety or Sketch Comedy Series, and Browne was nominated for Best Lead Performance in a Digital Program or Series for the webseries The Writers' Block.
The killing of colonist militia at Fort Parker also resulted in the Comanche taking two women and three children as captives. The Parkers were well known, and the destruction of most of their clan produced shock throughout Texas. Comanche braves, c. 1867–1874. Survivors, especially James W. Parker, called for vengeance and help to recover the captives.
Much of the colonist population is killed, but the Empire sends no help. The Empire forgets about Primus IV, as does the rest of the universe. After the colonists manage to fight off the Mantai to less inhabitable parts of the world, they begin to rebuild. Soon after, they discover a material known as SL-18.
From 2003 until 2005 the school went through a major renovation, updating many facilities in the school. The library has been fortunate to receive two Times Colonist Raise a Reader Grants. The first in 2008–9, for $1,400, was directed to Science reading materials. In 2009–10, the school received $1,200 for audio books and the companion novels.
These colonist were welcomed by Cheraman Perumal of The Emperor of Kerala given special permission as 72 Royal Privileges Known as Thomas of Cana copper plates Today, the majority of Knanaya are members of the Syro-Malabar Catholic Church (Kottayam Archeparchy) and the Jacobite Syrian Orthodox Church (Knanaya Archdiocese) under guidance and directorate of Sevarios Kuriakose.
She was her father's "delight and darling", according to colonist Captain Ralph HamorHamor, True Discourse. p. 802. but she was not in line to inherit a position as a weroance, sub-chief, or mamanatowick (paramount chief). Instead, Powhatan's brothers and sisters and his sisters' children all stood in line to succeed him.Rountree, Helen C. (January 25, 2011).
George Jacobs Sr. (1609–1692) was an English colonist in the Massachusetts Bay Colony who was accused of witchcraft in 1692 during the Salem witch trials in Salem Village, Massachusetts. He was convicted and hanged on August 19, 1692. His son, George Jr., was also accused but evaded arrest. Jacobs' accusers included his daughter-in-law and granddaughter, Margaret.
"Notify Company City Will Complete Work," The Victoria Daily Colonist, Apr. 24, 1913, p. 3. The watershed was secured through purchase by the City of the surrounding Sooke Lake. The consulting engineer recommended that the neighboring Leech River watershed also be acquired and connected to Sooke Lake by a conduit, but this was not undertaken at the time.
Together they founded Town Theatre in Columbia, South Carolina. In 1930, he was a MacDowell colonist. He spent a few years in Hollywood as a dialect coach, eventually settling in New York in 1936 as an actor. He was awarded the Outer Critics Circle Award in 1950 for his role as the Postman in Come Back, Little Sheba.
The Place Where We Lived is the sixth album by Canadian singer-songwriter Hayden, released May 26, 2009 on Hardwood Records and Universal Music Canada. The album was not heavily promoted, and Hayden did not undertake an extensive concert tour to support it."Hayden returns after four-year absence from recording, performing". Victoria Times-Colonist, January 28, 2013.
Deer Lodge is an unincorporated community in Morgan County, Tennessee, United States. It is located along Tennessee State Route 329 west-southwest of Sunbright. Deer Lodge has a post office with ZIP code 37726, which opened on April 16, 1886. The community was established as a health resort in the 1880s by Rugby colonist Abner Ross.
Besides cultivating the land, the exiled reformers constructed a small vessel, and traded to Norfolk Island. At the end of 1799 Palmer and his friend James Ellis—who had followed him from Dundee as a colonist—combined with others to purchase a vessel in which they might return home, when Palmer's sentence expired in September 1800.
They had five children: John Jaques Upham, Adelaide Upham, Horace Alonzo Upham, Caroline Jaques Upham and Sarah Maria Upham. Horace's former summer home, now known as Wawbeek-Horace A.J. Upham House, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The Uphams were descended from Massachusetts Bay colonist John Upham, who arrived in 1680 and settled in Malden.
See Nicholas Spencer and Spencer (surname) for the English origins of the Spencer name generally. was an early Virginia colonist on Jamestown Island, who was an Ancient planter and a member of the Virginia House of Burgesses in Jamestown, Virginia for Mulberry Island in 1632/33.Stanard, William G. and Mary Newton Stanard. The Virginia Colonial Register.
The Seals are owned by Russ Parker and his son Darren.Dheensaw, Cleve. Boys of summer are back Victoria Times-Colonist, October 2, 2008 Russ is the former owner of the Class AAA Pacific Coast League's Calgary Cannons (now the Albuquerque Isotopes). He is also the long-time owner of the Regina Pats hockey team of the Western Hockey League.
Raleigh was the first Native American to have a Christian conversion and an English resting place. Chief Powhatan's daughter, Pocahontas spent some of her life in London two years after she married English colonist John Rolfe. At age twenty- one, Pocahontas died due to an unknown disease. She was buried at St George's Church in Gravesend afterwards.
A man named Metacomet was a Wampanoag Indian leader who was known as King Philip. He was mainly responsible for initiating the war. Metacomet and his band of Wampanoag Indians fought the colonist after the land called Plymouth was taken from them. King Philip's War was brutal and devastated most of the settlements in New England.
Balfas writes that Datuk Meringgih is a character that is "drawn in black and white, but strong enough to create serious conflicts around him." He later becomes the "champion of anti-colonist resistance", fuelled only by his own greed; Foulcher argues that it is unlikely that Datuk Meringgih's actions were an attempt by Rusli to insert anti-Dutch commentary.
Moses Austin, a British colonist, was the only man granted an empresarial contract in Texas under Spanish law. But Moses Austin died before he could begin his colony, and Mexico achieved its independence from Spain in September 1821. At this time, about 3500 colonists lived in Texas, mostly congregated at San Antonio and La Bahia.Edmondson (2000), p. 75.
Opuntia ficus-indica (known as the prickly pear) is a plant that has been part of the landscape of South Africa for over 250 years.Van Sittert, L., 2002. ‘Our irrepressible fellow-colonist’: the biological invasion of prickly pear (Opuntia ficus-indica) in the Eastern Cape c. 1890–c. 1910. Journal of Historical Geography, 28(3), p.
Pocahontas, Native American wife of American colonist John Rolfe, died in Gravesend on her way back to the New World at age 20 or 21 and was buried under the chancel of this church on 21 March 1617. When the church was rebuilt in 1731 the exact spot was lost. William Ordway Partridge's bronze statue commemorates her.
Prager, Michael (July 1, 2004). "Aimee Mann gets help from a friend", Boston Globe, p. D2. He has written with and toured with Americana chanteuse Madeleine PeyrouxDevlin, Mike (August 6, 2009). "Singer finds a voice of her own: After spending years as a busker, Madeleine Peyroux is now playing to much more receptive audiences", Times-Colonist, p. D6.
William Thornton (about 1622 – after 22 December 1708) was a planter and colonist in 17th–century Virginia. He was one of approximately thirty early Virginia colonists to progenerate descendants that through intermarriage would establish themselves as a political and social 'aristocracy' in America. Among his most notable descendants are U.S. Presidents James Madison and Zachary Taylor.
Victoria Times-Colonist, December 9, 2000. He hosted On the Island until his death in 2004. Grierson was also a contributor to other network programming including Westcoast Performance, Richardson's Roundup, Morningside, Gabereau, Sunday Morning, Prime Time, Arts National, Sunday Matinee, Vanishing Point and DiscDrive. He was also the voice of the National Research Council Time Signal.
By 1687, a Swedish colonist, Tyman Stidham opened the first mill on the Brandywine, near Wilmington. About 1735, Brandywine Village was founded across the creek from Wilmington. Quakers Elizabeth Levis Shipley, her husband William Shipley, and Thomas Canby were important in establishing the village and its supporting flour mills. By 1743, Thomas's son Oliver owned 3 mill sites.
At the arrival of the Colonist in Port Moresby it presented papers from the colonial secretary in Brisbane to William Bairstow Ingham (whom Ingham is named after) appointing him "agent for the Queensland Government" in the area. At that stage Ingham, Kendall Broadbent (a naturalist who collected the first frill-necked monarch) and Andrew Goldie (naturalist who has the Goldie's bird-of-paradise named after him) were the only European inhabitants of Port Moresby in early 1878, with Ingham having only arrived two months earlier. Ingham's stint as the Queensland Government agent was short, as on 28 November 1878, he and 6 others were murdered and eaten on Brooker (Utian) Island in the Calvados Chain of the Louisiade Archipelago. By August the Colonist had left the prospectors returning to Sydney.
The Baron signed a new contract with the new president on December 6, 1855. According to the contract each colonist would be reimbursed by the government for the cost of the voyage from Europe to Pozuzo, the construction of a new highway from Cerro de Pasco to Pozuzo, each colonist 15 years old or older would receive 15 pesos, the distribution of land between the colonists of which they would have legal ownership, exemption for the first six months of taxes, and the responsibility to build schools, churches, and other basic needs. The government, however, required that the colonists be Catholic and workers skilled at a trade. To make this project possible the Baron was hired by the Peruvian government to oversee the colonization, paying him a salary of 2,400 pesos annually.
Other than this the document is intact and legible. The Cumberland Compact was composed and signed by 256 colonists. One colonist, James Patrick of Virginia, was illiterate and marked his name with an "X". This constitution called for a governing council of 12 judges who would be elected by the vote of free men 21 years of age or older.
Robert "King" Carter (1662/63 – 4 August 1732), of Lancaster County, was an American businessman and colonist in Virginia and one of the wealthiest men in the colonies. As President of the Governor's Council of the Virginia Colony, he was acting Governor of Virginia in 1726-1727 after the death in office of Governor Hugh Drysdale.Brock, Robert Alonzo (1888). Virginia and Virginians, Vol.
Although the name originated in England, there are now many more Sacketts in the United States. The great majority of these are in the line of Simon Sackett the colonist (1595–1635). Sacketts in the UK number just under 500, giving a frequency of 9 per million, and a surname ranking of 11,423.Surnames of England and Wales – the ONS list.
Janet Anderson Craig Peterson (born May 3, 1937 in Strathaven, Lanarkshire, Scotland) is a Scottish-Canadian non-fiction writer, historian, artist, and journalist best known for her popular historical books about Vancouver Island, particularly those about the cities of Nanaimo and Port Alberni. Peterson has been profiled (and her work featured) in the Times Colonist and Tofino- Ucluelet Westerly News.
Shephard arrived in Nelson in 1861 on the Donna Lita. For several years, he was an editor for the Nelson newspaper Colonist. He unsuccessfully contested the Waimea electorate in the 1867 by-election, and the City of Nelson electorate in the 1868 by-election. He represented the Waimea electorate from to 1875, when he was defeated; and from to 1885 when he resigned.
Brian Brett in conversation with Silver Donald Cameron about his work. Brett began writing in the 1960s. In the early 1970s, he worked as a freelance journalist and critic for The Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star, the Vancouver Sun, The New Reader, Books in Canada, and the Victoria Times-Colonist. He was a poetry critic and columnist for Vancouver's The Province.
"Ex-Ottawa mayor was president of NDP", in Victoria Times Colonist, Tues., September 16, 2008, page D9. She would return to Ottawa City Hall for the last time to lie in state in the Jean Pigott Hall until her funeral service on September 19. Among the over 800 people attending the public service were notable politicians including Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty.
A few years before, the French admiral and colonist Villegagnon and his friend and comrade, Admiral Coligny, managed to build a fort in the area of modern-day Rio de Janeiro which they called Fort Coligny. As the French colony grew in size and power it was named Henriville and became a serious threat to the Portuguese establishment in Brazil.
Permanent replacement, the Delta Princess with a speed of 12 knots, entered service in 1949.The Daily Colonist, 13 May 1949 The new steel hull double-ended twin-screw ferry had a capacity for 35 cars and 200 passengers. A new landing at Woodward's Landing was built throughout 1952–53. In November 1952, the charter contract ceased and the province assumed operations.
In 1881 Adams fell seriously ill and as his medical advisors considered he may not recover he resigned from Parliament. He also stepped down from his position with Adams and Kingdon at that time handing it over to his brother, Percy Adams.Obituary, Colonist, Volume XLVIII, Issue 11650, 11 June 1906, Page 2 His resignation caused the , which was won by Henry Levestam.
He has been referred to by the other colonists as 'The Professor'. Viewers have consistently rated him as the number one colonist. John Valencia, "The Machinist," is a 37-year-old machinist from Covina, California, specializing in fitting for irrigation waterworks, repairing motor-vehicle engines, and rebuilding alternators to hook up to generators for electricity. He also has developed hand crank electrical systems.
In 1637 the colony established a committee "to take order for a new college at Newtown".Jones, p. 243 The committee consisted of most of the colony's elders, including Dudley. In 1638, John Harvard, a childless colonist, bequeathed to the colony his library and half of his estate as a contribution to the college, which was consequently named in his honor.
Conrad Weiser (senior) wrote for his children, "Buried beside Her Ancestors, she was a god-fearing woman and much loved by Her neighbors. Her motto was Jesus I live for thee, I die for thee, thine am I in life and death."Paul A. W. Wallace, Conrad Weiser, 1696-1760, Friend of Colonist and Mohawk. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1945.
The Nelson Examiner was the first newspaper published in the South Island. It was established by Charles Elliott (1811–1876) in 1842, within a few weeks of New Zealand Company settlers arriving in Nelson. Other early newspapers were The Colonist and the Nelson Evening Mail. Today the Nelson Mail publishes four days a week and is part of the Fairfax Group.
The colony consisted of 14 houses, each named after a flower, on lots . The houses were in a large square which had graded streets and sidewalks. There was a central community house for social activities within the project square with a resident colonist as a manager and caretaker. The community house had a fireplace, an assembly room, and game rooms.
The business grew and expanded with his son, John Tayloe II, when, in 1756, he bought the Occoquan Ironworks company, eventually running it as one business with the Neabsco. His son John Tayloe II and his first cousin Col. Thomas Lee (Virginia colonist) were named executors. He left Tayloe's Quarter, what was to become Mount Airy, to his son John.
Sheila Malcolmson (born March 26, 1966) is a Canadian politician who has served as the Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia for the electoral district of Nanaimo since January 30, 2019. She was previously the federal Member of Parliament for Nanaimo-Ladysmith from 2015 to 2019."NDP's Sheila Malcolmson wins new Nanaimo-Ladysmith riding". Victoria Times-Colonist, October 19, 2015.
The economy in Anno 1503 is built on providing different goods to colonist citizens. It begins with the creation of cheap goods, and progresses in civilization levels throughout the game leading to more advanced goods. Since the game is built on different levels of civilizations (pioneer, settler, citizen, merchant, aristocrat), each civilization level requires more goods and more balancing skills and finesse.
This occurred as part of a punitive mission following the killing of colonist Edmund Watson near the Archer River. Urquhart and his troopers patrolled extensively around the peninsula and were also assigned a vessel named the Albatross to travel around various islands in the Torres Strait. In 1890, Urquhart played a major role in the rescue of survivors from the shipwrecked RMS Quetta.
Brandon was surveyed as a site for a township in 1882 and the first allotments were sold later that year. The town is named after Henry Brandon a sugar pioneer in the Mackay and Lower Burdekin regions. Henry Brandon was also the son-in-law of the notorious colonist, Korah Halcomb Wills. Brandon Post Office opened on 6 September 1883.
Price lives in Victoria, British Columbia, and is married to Canadian novelist Esi Edugyan. Their first child was born in August 2011,Marsha Lederman, "Esi Edugyan: A new baby, and an armful of literary-award nominations", The Globe and Mail, October 7, 2011. their second in 2014.Adrian Chamberlain, "Victoria writer Steven Price scores international book deal", Times Colonist, November 13, 2014.
James Cowan (born 1952) was the twelfth Anglican Bishop of British Columbia,Times Colonist serving from 2004 to 2012. Cowan was educated at the University of Saskatchewan and ordained in 1977. He worked in the Diocese of Qu’Appelle for 20 years before coming to British Columbia to be its Diocesan Executive Officer, a post he held until his appointment to the episcopate.
Paul Dunn is a Canadian playwright and actor."Couple go separate ways for sake of production; Paul Dunn and Mark Crawford take singular approach to Belfry show". Victoria Times-Colonist, August 10, 2017. He is most noted as co- creator with Damien Atkins and Andrew Kushnir of The Gay Heritage Project,"Gay Heritage Project has a bright future". Toronto Star, November 24, 2013.
The Canadian Clowning technique is a mask-based style of performance created by Richard Pochinko."Canadian clown theatre goes to a whole new level". Victoria Times-Colonist, March 13, 2005. Also known as the "Pochinko Method" or "Clown Through Mask", seven masks are used, each representing one of the six physical directions (North, South, East, West, Above-above and Below- below).
In the summer of 1930, Santmyer became a MacDowell colonist. There, she wrote her third novel, Farewell, Summer (published posthumously) and befriended actor and playwright Daniel Reed and novelist Thornton Wilder. The Depression forced the closure of the rope factory where Santmyer's father worked. He found employment in Orange County, California, the house was sold, and the family relocated to the West Coast.
29Merrick, p. 12 the daughter of Elder William Brewster,Merrick, 1Merrick, 2Merrick, 3Merrick, 4Merrick, 5 the Pilgrim colonist leader and spiritual elder of the Plymouth Colony, and passenger aboard the Mayflower and one of the signers of the Mayflower Compact; and Mary Brewster. Fear arrived at Plymouth, Massachusetts on July 10, 1623 aboard the Anne. Fear died sometime before December 12, 1634.
Numerous Native American tribes had lived in this part of the Piedmont region since prehistoric times. During the colonial period, the area was inhabited by Siouan language-speaking tribes. In 1728, English colonist William Byrd headed an expedition sent to determine the true boundary between Virginia and North Carolina. Late that summer, the party camped upstream from what is now Danville.
Richard's sister, Mary Kennon, was married to Major John Fairfax Bolling, half-brother of Richard's wife. Major Bolling was the son of Col. Robert Bolling and his first wife Jane Rolfe, who was granddaughter of the early colonist John Rolfe and his Native American wife, Pocahontas. The Bollings lived at Cobb's, a plantation in eastern Chesterfield near Point-of- Rocks.
Rebecca/Pocahontas married English colonist John Rolfe on April 5, 1614 in Jamestown. Their mixed-race descendants were among the First Families of Virginia. The English colonial government of Virginia imposed its own order on the land and peoples. In 1664 it established Stafford County from territory previously part of Westmoreland County (which had been created from Northumberland County in 1653).
1900 "Papers Past" "Nelson Garrison Band" Colonist, Nelson, 22 February 1900, 14 May 1902. Grand Junction (March) 1905 Dedicated to the Grand Junction Mine in Waihi "Papers Past" "Waihi Federal Band" Waihi Daily Telegraph, Waihi, 17 April 1905. Golden Grain (Waltz) c. 1927 "Papers Past" "Broadcast in concert Australian Light Horse Band 2FC Sydney" The Press, Christchurch' 2 April 1927.
Thomas Prence (c. 1601 – March 29, 1673) was an English born colonist who arrived in the colony of Plymouth in November 1621 on the ship Fortune. In 1644 he moved to Eastham, which he helped found, returning later to Plymouth. For many years, he was prominent in Plymouth colony affairs, and was colony governor for about twenty years, covering three terms.
Harrison taught in the English department at Dawson College in Montreal, Quebec,Abley, Mark (September 14, 1991). "A cautionary tale about a book that failed to fly", The Gazette, p. K3. and was chair of the creative writing department at Malaspina University-College in Nanaimo.Moreau, Vivian (January 6, 2002). "Keith Harrison: Records the voices of sea and rainforest", Times Colonist, p. D8.
The Taíno people, the indigenous peoples who encountered European explorers and settlers, were the long-time settlers in this area. The Spanish colonist Juan Ramírez de Arellano established Bayamón as a Spanish settlement on May 22, 1772. Two beliefs exist about the origin of the name Bayamón. According to one belief, it was named after the local Taíno chief, Bahamon.
Bruce Chase died of colon cancer on June 29, 2001 at a hospice in Branford, Connecticut. Chase was a direct descendant of Aquila Chase, a Massachusetts Bay colonist and cofounder of Newbury, Massachusetts. Among his relatives were Salmon Portland Chase, the Secretary of the Treasury under Abraham Lincoln and, later, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, and for whom Chase Bank is named.
Two concerts were scheduled in Western Canada, during which they were to play all their hit songs. On July 18, 2010, the three original members performed together at the Surrey Fusion Festival in Surrey, British Columbia."Grapes end their wrath; Folk-rock trio cites maturity for helping overcome their differences as they focus on recapturing musical magic". Victoria Times-Colonist, October 31, 2013.
Binford Taylor Carter, Jr. was born in High Point, North Carolina on November 29, 1943 to Binford Taylor Carter, Sr. and Mary Sue Young. He grew up in Madison. His paternal grandparents, Yancey Ligon Carter and Mary Elizabeth Morton, were prominent tobacco farmers in Rockingham County. Carter is a descendant of the colonist Thomas Carter, a Puritan minister of the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
An artist's conception of the hypothetical human colonization of Mars and its new human inhabitants Wellsian Martian Tripod in the town of Woking, England A Martian is an inhabitant of the planet Mars or a human colonist on Mars. Although the search for evidence of life on Mars continues, many science fiction writers have imagined what extraterrestrial life on Mars might be like.
It turns out that luxuries do not fall under the umbrella of the necessities of life. However QBF-41 offers a sample tube of shaving cream free of charge. The colonist asks to pay for it and it turns out he has no right to use the services of a competing firm. The robot also receives a similar warning and is deactivated.
Mike Devlin, Times Colonist, 8 October 2013 In 2014 he continued to perform at folk festivals, including KIngsville Folk with jazz pianist Karel Roessingh and Nadina Mackie-Jackson on bassoon."Review: Kingsville Folk 2014". Folk Roots Radio, JAN HALL As of 2018, Valdy continues to regularly tour across Canada, including a performance on the main stage at the Mariposa Folk Festival.
Adolphe, Jacquies ( - 30 January 1860) was a shopkeeper, printer, trade unionist, and newspaper publisher in Quebec City. beginning in 1837, be printed the weekly Le Fantasque paper for Napoléon Aubin. In 1839 he was arrested and his press seized due to the contents of the paper. Following his release the same year he started publishing the Canadian Colonist and Commercial Advertiser.
Miller, E.C. and Kopiasz, G. "Light Rail and Omaha: It Takes a Proactive Community to Build Light Rail: the Case for Omaha", The New Colonist. Retrieved 8/22/07. The historical Omaha port site was located in downtown, with dozens of businesses lining the riverside to serve the steamboats and other water traffic. Jobbers Canyon was originally built here to accommodate river traffic.
In the Mexican–American War, fellow German colonist and veteran of the French Foreign Legion Augustus Buchel formed the First Regiment of Texas Foot Rifles, serving as its Captain. Emil Kriewitz was a co- founding member of the company of eighty volunteers. Keidel enlisted with the unit. On May 22, 1846, the company was drafted into the service of Col.
Though the Potlatch system did not die out entirely among the Heiltsuk, it was forced underground. Missionary influence in Bella Bella was significant from the late 19th century. The missionary served as religious authority, doctor (with control over health), and magistrate. Chiefs responded by hosting Christmas feasts, where even the most ardent colonist could not stop the distribution of gifts.
Victoria Times-Colonist, July 3, 2005. the latter of which won the Toronto International Film Festival Award for Best Canadian Film in 2004"Women behind two hot indie films share secrets at Vancouver fest". Canadian Press, October 3, 2005. and was a Genie Award nominee for Canadian Screen Award for Best Motion Picture at the 26th Genie Awards in 2006.
Samuel Sharpe should not be confused with William Sharpe (Sergeant Sharp(e)), another early Virginia colonist and member of the House of Burgesses in 1629 with whom he is sometimes erroneously conflated.See separate entries for Samuel Sharpe and William Sharpe at McCartney, Martha W. Virginia immigrants and adventurers, 1607-1635: a biographical dictionary. Baltimore: Genealogical Pub. Co., 2007. . p. 631.
The son of Michael Charles Challis (1865–1928),Personal, The (Launceston) Examiner, (Thursday, 22 March 1928), p.6.Sudden Death: Mr. Michael Charles Challis, The Mercury, (Thursday, 22 March 1928), p.6. and Margaret Challis (1868–1943), née McGregor,Marriages, Challis—M'Gregor, The Colonist, (Saturday, 7 December 1899), p.1.Deaths: Challis, The Mercury, (Monday, 8 November 1943), p.8.
The administration of Lord North (1770–1782) tried to defeat the colonist rebellion by military force. British and American forces clashed in 1775 and in 1776 came the American Declaration of Independence. Burke was appalled by celebrations in Britain of the defeat of the Americans at New York and Pennsylvania. He claimed the English national character was being changed by this authoritarianism.
The poet and colonist Edmund Spenser wrote that the victims "were brought to such wretchedness as that any stony heart would have rued the same".Somerset, 668. Elizabeth advised her commanders that the Irish, "that rude and barbarous nation", be well treated; but she or her commanders showed no remorse when force and bloodshed served their authoritarian purpose.Somerset, 668–669.
In 1739, William Johnson, an influential Anglo-Irish colonist who had previously lived closer to Amsterdam, purchased land including the site of the village. He established a mill in 1744. The original name of the settlement was "Mount Johnson." The community was the original seat of power of William Johnson before he moved on to found the City of Johnstown further west.
Strabo,Strabo. Geographica. Book 10, Section 6. who depends of course on the books available to him, goes on to elaborate: Beside this sole reference to Dorians in Crete, the mention of the Iliad of the Heraclid Tlepolemus, a warrior on the side of Achaeans and colonist of three important Dorian cities in Rhodes has been also regarded as a later interpolation.
Sperry was born at Cincinnatus, New York, on October 12, 1860, to Stephen Decatur Sperry and Mary Burst. His mother died the next day, from complications from his birth. He was of English ancestry. His family had been in what is now the Northeastern United States since the 1600s, and his earliest American ancestor was an English colonist named Richard Sperry.
This road leads to the more residential section of Greenbrier as well as another shopping center in the opposite direction. Elizabeth Rolfe was born here in 1620 to English colonist John Rolfe and his third wife, Jane Pierce. Two years later, Jane married Captain Roger Smith after Rolfe's death. Elizabeth was married to John Milner of Nansemond until her death in 1635.
Susanna was born in 1814 in Williamson County, Tennessee and never learned to read and write. On May 24, 1829, when she was 15, she married Almaron Dickinson. Two years later, they became DeWitt Colonists, obtaining property on the San Marcos River, where they opened a blacksmith shop and also invested in a hat factory run by fellow colonist George Kimbell in Gonzales.
In 1986 he collaborated with colleague Scott Dixon on a mock interview with Elvis Presley, in which Ivings as Presley reported on his experience of the afterlife. In 1996, he conducted interviews with several Canadian radio stations in character as George Burns on the occasion of Burns' 100th birthday."A couple from the Small World department". Victoria Times-Colonist, February 8, 1996.
Players must manage multiple colonists and create their routines, allowing them to develop their community and progress on their own organically. Each AI-controlled colonist can be given priorities or various tasks for survival. Players can collaborate with one other to form larger colonies. These large colonies can then form their own governments, rules, or taxes, and eventually, become cities.
Andrew Budds (1809-1893), early colonist of Victoria. Andrew Budds (1809–1893) is included in the famous photographic montage, published by Thomas Foster Chuck in 1872, entitled The Explorers and Early Colonists of Victoria. He appears as number 24 in the montage, and is listed as having arrived in Victoria, Australia in 1837. Budds was born in Queens County, Ireland in 1809.
1, 3 Eventually, as the Society promised, houses were built for colonists in the form of a village. In August 1893, as another fulfillment of the Society's promises, each colonist was assigned a quarter section of land. Later that year, on November 10, 1893, Jeanne Simonin was born, marking the first birth in Montmartre.Couckuyt, Marianne in Montmartre: History of the Village, 2012, vol.
With the dissolving of the Merchant Adventurers there was a great need for the colonist to pay their debts. William Bradford, Allerton and others took on the colony's debt to the Merchant Adventurers with the provision that they be given a monopoly in the fur trade.David Lindsay, Mayflower Bastard: A Stranger amongst the Pilgrims (New York: St. Martins Press, 2002), p.
Catharina Besselman (1678-1702), was an influential Dutch colonist in the Dutch East Indies. She was famous for her unconventional lifestyle and the conflict between her spouse and the church which was caused because of it. She was the daughter of merchant Johannes John and Christina Porcelius. Her father was manager of Tonkin and treasurer in the Castle of Batavia.
Call married also, later in life, women who bore him no children. These were his Indian- killed brother Josiah's widow, Henrietta Caroline Williams (in 1861, when Anson was 50), and third wife Margaretta's widowed sister, Ann Clark (in 1870, when he was 59).Carlisle, Howard M., Colonist Fathers, Corporate Sons: A Selective History of the Call Family, Salt Lake City: Calls Trust, 1996.
Igor Ragusnik demands that his family's isolation end. Elsevere's ruling council refuses his demands, and if the strike continues, the planetoid's waste processing machinery will break down and every colonist will die from disease. Although the machinery is not difficult to operate, the taboo is so strong that no other Elseverean will do so. Only Lamorak is willing to speak to Ragusnik.
When confronted with problems he blustered, cajoled, and criticised, but he would not do anything. By April 1844 he had alienated practically every colonist. One of them wrote: "The baneful influence of Colonel Wakefield has ruined every settler and the colony of Port Nicholson." Early in 1842 Wakefield had been joined in New Zealand by his daughter, Emily, then sixteen years old.
The Underhill Burying Ground is located upon a portion of approximately that was granted by Lenape Native Americans to English colonist Captain John Underhill in 1667. This area was originally called Matinecock, after the village of one of the Lenape bands. Today it is within the Village of Lattingtown. Captain John Underhill was buried here on his own land in 1672.
Among these was Daniel Bonelli, who after the destruction of the flood went on to be a pioneer colonist of St. Thomas, Nevada in the Moapa Valley, a farmer, later a salt miner and the owner of Bonelli's Ferry, at Rioville, Nevada on the road between southwestern Utah and Arizona on the Colorado River at its confluence with the Virgin River.
11 Baldaia erected a residence and chapel in Angra do Heroísmo. In 1474, Baldaia retired to Villa da Praia, and donated his Angra lands to the Franciscan Order. His manor house would serve as a Franciscan chapter house and later a lyceum, while his chapel would be enlargened to become the church of Nossa Senhora da Guia. Baldaia the colonist died in 1481.
Increase Niles Tarbox was born in 1815. He was among the original members of the New England Tarbox Family to rise to political and academic prominence in the region. His relations include U.S. Representative John K. Tarbox, John Tarbox (an important early Massachusetts colonist), and Jack M. Tarbox (an aviation engineer and executive).Boston Brahmin#Tarbox Tarbox graduated from Yale University in 1844.
Exophiala pisciphila is commonly found in soil, plants and water in North America, Netherlands, United Kingdom, and Australia. E. pisciphila occurs as a colonist or pathogen in cold-blooded vertebrates such as various commercially cultivated fish and amphibians. It has low host specificity. Captive fish are especially susceptible due to the confined space of aquariums and accumulation of fungal particles.
John Strong (16101699) was an English-born New England colonist, politician, Puritan church leader, tanner and one of the founders of Windsor, Connecticut and Northampton, Massachusetts as well as the progenitor of nearly all the Strong families in what is now the United States. He was referred to as Elder John Strong because he was an Elder in the church.
Jan van Ryen (fl. 1620s-1630s) was a 17th-century Dutch privateer, explorer, and colonist. He was granted a commission by the Dutch West Indies Company and active against the Spanish in the West Indies during the 1620s. He and Claude Prevost attempted to establish Dutch colonies in Guyana, although they both failed with most Dutch colonists being killed by natives in 1627.
"When I Was Miss Dow" is a short story by the American writer Sonya Dorman. It was first published in Galaxy Science Fiction in June 1966.. Retrieved 21 January 2019. In the story, a being on a planet colonized by people from Earth is reformed as a female human, and has a relationship with a colonist which is more intense that expected.
He edited the short-lived South Australian Colonist for George Fife Angas and the South Australian News, a monthly first published in 1841. While running his bookshop, he married Sophia, the only daughter of William Fleming of the Methodist Missionary Committee, and had one daughter. His wife died in 1836 and he remarried (Fidelia Jenkins) a few years later (1839).
Colonial rule had had a profound effect on Southeast Asia. While the colonial powers profited much from the region's vast resources and large market, colonial rule did develop the region to a varying extent. Commercial agriculture, mining and an export based economy developed rapidly during this period. The introduction Christianity bought by the colonist also have profound effect in the societal change.
The monument by Louis-Philippe Hébert portrays Jeanne Mance comforting an injured colonist. The monument to Jeanne Mance was unveiled on September 2, 1909, in front of the Hôtel-Dieu de Montréal. In 1909 was celebrated the 250th anniversary of the arrival of the first three hospital sisters (1659). In 1642, she came specifically to establish Montreal's first hospital, Hôtel-Dieu de Montréal.
On March 1, 1862, an advertisement ran in the Victoria Colonist that offered camels for sale with an address where interested parties could go for further information. The camels were being sold by a San Francisco merchant, Otto Esche, who was probably inspired by the use of dromedary camels by the US Army Camel Corps. These Bactrian camels had worked in Arizona for rail construction and Esche had used them as pack animals during the California Gold Rush.The Cariboo Wagon Road Transportation - Camels The editor of the Colonist ran a headline stating "The Camels are Coming!" and with the flamboyant journalism typical of the day added, "and after they have been disposed of, a number of trained whales will be placed on the route between Victoria and the Stikine River carrying freight and inside passengers a la Jonah".
Drechsler, Horst (1980) Let Us Die Fighting: the struggle of the Herero and Nama against German imperialism (1884–1915), Zed Press, London Historian Horst Drechsler states that there was discussion of the possibility of establishing and placing the Herero in native reserves and that this was further proof of the German colonists' sense of ownership over the land. Drechsler illustrates the gap between the rights of a European and an African; the German Colonial League held that, in regards to legal matters, the testimony of seven Africans was equivalent to that of a colonist. Bridgman writes about racial tensions underlying these developments; the average German colonist viewed native Africans as a lowly source of cheap labour, and others welcomed their extermination. A new policy on debt collection, enforced in November 1903, also played a role in the uprising.
Daniel Elfrith (fl. 1607-1641) was a 17th-century English privateer, colonist and slave trader. In the service of the Earl of Warwick, Elfrith was involved in privateering expeditions against the Spanish from his base in Bermuda. He was particularly known for capturing Spanish slave ships bound for the Spanish Main and selling the slaves himself to rival colonies in the Caribbean and the American colonies.
Before this can be done, however, the Rebels kill all but a few members of the Syndicate in addition to Cassandra, the only living successful alien-human hybrid, before the Syndicate is able to send a signal to the Colonists. Without a successful hybrid, the timetable for the Colonist invasion will not be advanced and the date set for colonization remains December 22, 2012.
He represented the electoral district of Saanich North and the Islands as a member of the British Columbia New Democratic Party. Holman narrowly won the seat in the 2013 provincial election, in an almost perfect three-way split with the Liberal and Green candidates."NDP's Gary Holman wins Saanich North and the Islands riding by 163 votes:final unofficial count". Times Colonist, May 29, 2013.
However, several people reported seeing gang member Stephen Turney in Toronto buying jewelry and clothing, and was arrested when he could not explain where he got them. After first blaming John Biggins, claiming he was merely an accomplice, the court convicted Turney and he was hanged on 23 June 1847.Butts, pg. 23 The case captured the attention of the British Colonist newspaper in Toronto.
The Daily Colonist, 30 Jul 1919 The vessel unsuited to heavy traffic, because it loaded from the sides, increasing the risk of damage to vehicles, was replaced in 1926–27. Winter ice floes and spring flooding, which made navigation hazardous, prompted proposals for a permanent Deas Island crossing. Derelict former ferry dock, Ladner, 2005 The Ladner terminal moved twice. During 1920–21, construction costed $15,748.
Daniel gains the ability to see and fix problems in anything—a ship, a robot, a human—telekinetically. Yet he's still drifting and hunted as chattel. Finally he stumbles on a frontier planet and finds a purpose, helping the pioneers as a doctor, a servant, a colonist, and a friend. And here Daniel achieves an epiphany: human beings are more clever than they know.
Launceston won their second consecutive premiership that year. In a game towards the end of the season, En Avant of The Colonist described Wilson's marking as "a treat to witness". Wilson played for Tamar Cricket Club during the 1889–90 season. He again represented Northern Tasmania in the annual North v South match, playing an innings that was said to "please all lovers of the game".
She succeeds in doing so and the man appears. He is an old colonist, a disturbed man, from Mozambique, a former Portuguese colony. Another story emerges, beginning: "Aurora had a farm in Africa at the foothill of Mount Tabu..." ;Part 2—Paradise Flashback: The story of Aurora's life, told by Gian-Luca Ventura in voice over. This part takes place shortly before the Portuguese Colonial War began.
Translation of the caption in image: "A drum that the indians held during their areitos". Bartolomé de las Casas traveled to the new world as a colonist, but once there began writing in defense of the indigenous peoples. He described dancing accompanied by wooden drums and flutes. He noted that they would sometimes form lines with their hands on each other's shoulders and dance like that.
Forerunners and Competitors of the Pilgrims and Puritans, Vol. 2, Charles Herbert Levermore, Reprinted by BiblioBazaar, LLC, 2008 Christopher Levett of York: The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay, James Phinney Baxter, Printed for the Gorges Society, Portland, Me., 1893 Capt. Levett had six children, four by his first wife Mercy More, who was the daughter of Rev. Robert More, a Puritan rector in Guiseley, Yorkshire.
Snodgrass was President of the Nelson Chamber of Commerce from 1913-1914. He was also a member of the Nelson Harbour Board, Patriotic Society, and War Funds Council. In 1918 he was awarded the MBE for his patriotic work during World War I.Personal, Colonist, Volume LX, Issue 14662, 16 March 1918, Page 4 In 1935, he was awarded the King George V Silver Jubilee Medal.
McGeachy's place and date of birth are unknown, but he described himself as a "colonist" of Jamaica and as having learned surveying "at school". He served a five-year apprenticeship with Francis Ramsay. He married Margaret and they had daughters Rosa, Emma, Ada, and Margaret, and a son Charles Edward Alleyne McGeachy,Charles Edward Allegne Mcgeachy Jamaica Births and Baptisms, 1752-1920. Family Search.
Resources are acquired primarily by using a colonist to exploit one of the tiles adjacent to the colony and can be sold or used to produce other goods which can then be sold for a higher profit. The player has the option of trading with Europe or with the native cities; although the natives only accept and have a small number of goods, they have better prices.
Richard Paul Teleky (born 1946) is a Canadian writer and academic, currently a professor in the Humanities Department at York University in Toronto, Ontario."Tale of torment and tragedy based on real life and death". Victoria Times-Colonist, November 25, 2001. His primary research areas include Central European literature, ethnic studies/immigrant literature, early modernist writing, and film and contemporary culture, as well as the creative process.
The original county seat was at Varina, at the Varina Farms plantation across the James River from Henricus. Colonist John Rolfe built this plantation, where he lived with his wife, Pocahontas. Henrico's government was located at Varina from around 1640 until 1752. In 1752, Henrico relocated its seat to a more central location inside the city of Richmond, between Church Hill and what is now Tobacco Row.
Teen Titans #23 (Oct. 1969), Art by Cardy. In 1950, Cardy began his decades-long association with DC Comics, starting with the comic book Gang Busters, based on the dramatic radio show. He began developing his breakout reputation with Tomahawk, his most prominent series at the time, which starred a white American colonist fighting the British undercover as an Iroquois Indian during the American Revolutionary War.
Mstrkrft also produced Die Mannequin's first EP, How to Kill, and Magneta Lane's second LP, Dancing With Daggers. Mstrkrft have been commissioned to remix songs by such artists as Death From Above 1979, Justice, Kylie Minogue, Katy Perry, Bloc Party, Ayumi Hamasaki, Metric, Wolfmother,Devlin, Mike. "Masters of keyboards 'move with the times'", Times-Colonist, 2006-07-29, p. B3. Annie and The Kills.
Fulke Rose (10 April 1644 - c. March 1694) was a British physician and early colonist of Jamaica. He was one of the principal buyers in Jamaica of slaves taken by the Royal African Company and had extensive land-holdings on the island. He continued to practice medicine in Jamaica and with Hans Sloane attended the former privateer Henry Morgan towards the end of Morgan's life.
Paso Yobai is the largest and easternmost district of the Guairá Department, Paraguay. It was founded in 1923 by the Swiss (Geneva) colonist George Naville (1877-1943). Paso Yobai was governed as part of the district of Independencia until 1993, when it was granted independence by the central government. The largest town in the district is also named Paso Yobai, and contains around 2,500 people.
A large nation known for its devotion to the major religion of Sorrento Revisionism based on the teachings of an early wandering desert colonist prophet named Mamoud. Sorrento Revisionism is a sect that preaches conservatism, and the necessary use of force to make the world a better place. They are most often motivated to conflict by that reason, and even incorporate chaplains into military units.
Following the arrival of the flyboat on July 25, all of the colonists disembarked. Shortly thereafter, colonist George Howe was killed by a native while searching alone for crabs in Albemarle Sound. Baptism of Virginia Dare White dispatched Stafford to re-establish relations with the Croatan, with the help of Manteo. The Croatan described how a coalition of mainland tribes, led by Wanchese, had attacked Grenville's detachment.
The main challenge of this work is to obtain a genetic point of comparison, either from the remains of a Lost Colonist or one of their descendants. While it is conceivable to sequence DNA from 430-year-old bones, there are as of yet no bones from the Lost Colony to work with. As of 2019, the project has yet to identify any living descendants either.
Vancouver Sun June 20, 2006 BCTF Bargaining Bulletin June 21, 2006 Late in the day on June 30, 2006, the two sides reached a tentative agreement for a 16% increase in wages and benefits over a five-year contract. Because the agreement was reached before the month-end deadline, teachers were eligible for a signing bonus of approximately $4,000.Victoria Times Colonist July 1, 2006.
41 He was the uncle of New England colonist Sir Richard Saltonstall, father-in-law of Richard Wyche (a director of the English East India Company) and Sir Thomas Myddelton (a later Lord Mayor of London), and grandfather of Sir Peter Wyche (Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire), Nathaniel Wyche (president of the English East India Company) and Sir Thomas Myddelton (a general in the English Civil War).
The lands for this municipality were given away by the King of Spain, on 30 October 1692, composed of 2 titles, "Santa Maria Magdalena" and "San Lucas". In the census of 1791 it appears as part of "Curato de Cerquin". It was founded in 1837 for the initiative of Captain Jeronimo Acosta. The church was built in 1856, a historical relic left by the Spanish colonist.
Captain de La Motte chose not to remain in New France as a colonist and he returned to France in the summer of 1670 (or possibly the end of 1673), along with some members of his regiment. He died at Gadencourt. Isle La Motte, Vermont, a small island in Lake Champlain which was the site of Fort Sainte Anne, was named for Pierre La Motte.
The Samuel Gardner House is a historic colonial American house at 1035 Gardner's Neck Road in Swansea, Massachusetts. This 1-1/2 story wood frame gambrel-roofed house was built c. 1768 by Samuel Gardner, whose father (also named Samuel) was the first English colonist to settle Gardner's Neck after its purchase from local Native Americans. It is a well-preserved 18th century farmhouse.
Disease of the nails and skin caused by A. unguis has been reported. This species was one of two most common fungi encountered in the homes of asthmatic children in Detroit, Michigan, reported from 72% of homes. It has also been reported as a colonist of water-damaged construction materials in Finland, where it was found to produce the mycotoxin, sterigmatocystin, a potent carcinogen and mutagen.
Betsch was born in Jacksonville, Florida. His family belonged to the African-American upper class; his grandfather was the black millionaire Abraham Lincoln Lewis and his grandmother Mary's ancestors included the English colonist Zephaniah Kingsley and Anna Kingsley, an African princess. His mother was a church organist and pianist, and his older sister Marvyne a soprano singer."Travelogue", Jet, January 28, 1960, p. 40.
The Indigenous people believed they were to serve the land while white colonists believed the land should serve them. As a result, when the two sides came in contact, they disputed over how to "claim" land. The height of this conflict began to occur during Manifest Destinyas the white colonist population began to grow and move westward into more parts of Indigenous lands and communities.
Louis was a well-known parrot from Victoria, British Columbia.Ruttan, Stephen (30 September 2012). Tales from the Vault, a new Victoria history series, begins with Miss Wilson and the famous parrot, Times Colonist From the time of his reclusive owner's death in 1949 until 1966 he continued to live on his owner's estate, well-provided for in her will, and preventing development of the prime real estate.
"Territory of East Africa 1903". In the British colonial region adjoining German East Africa (a portion of which was referenced as Tanganyika), tough American colonist John Gale (Van Heflin) is leading a safari to bring in escaped murderer Abel McCracken (Jeff Morrow), who is stirring up the (fictional) Nukumbi tribe and endangering Gale's holdings.Sculthorpe, Derek. Van Heflin: A Life in Film, pages 113–14.
Betty Holekamp (1826–1902) was a German colonist and pioneer in Texas. She is recognized for several "firsts" as a Texas pioneer, such as being the first to sew an American flag upon Texas's acceptance into the Union, and thus is known as the Betsy Ross of Texas.Ransleben, Guido E. A Hundred Years of Comfort in Texas. Press of The Naylor Company, 1954, p. 191.
Birthplace of Everett in Dorchester, Massachusetts. ca.1898 photo Edward Everett was born on April 11, 1794 in Dorchester, Massachusetts (then independent from Boston), the fourth of eight children, to the Rev. Oliver Everett and Lucy Hill Everett, the daughter of Alexander Sears Hill. His father was a direct descendant of early colonist Richard Everett, and his mother's family also had deep colonial roots.
An example is Susanna Wright, who was raised in Lancashire and became an American colonist associated with the Midlands Enlightenment. It is not known whether Darwin and Wright knew each other, although they definitely knew many people in common. Other women who received substantial education and who participated in the broader world (albeit sometimes anonymously) whom Darwin definitely knew were Maria Jacson and Anna Seward.
Somerton Historic District is a national historic district located at Suffolk, Virginia. Prior to annexation in 1974 Somerton was part of now non-existing Nansemond County. The district encompasses 15 contributing buildings and 2 contributing sites in the rural village of Somerton in Virginia. The district was a 250 acre 17th century grant to Sir Thomas Jernigan a colonist from Somerleyton in Suffolk County. England.
Around 1820, Lafitte reportedly married Madeline Regaud, possibly the widow or daughter of a French colonist who had died during an ill-fated expedition to Galveston. She had his only known son, Jean Pierre Lafitte (d. 1832). The remnants of the family are now scattered across St. Bernard parish associated with the last name Hotard, and through marriage making Jean Lafitte related to Carlos Marcello .
The film was released in the United States September 23, 2010. The Times-Colonist named it as one of "10 films you will want to watch" at the Victoria Film Festival. The movie was relatively successful, earning $77,960 on its opening weekend, in just 25 theaters. It was then expanded to 60 theaters, and by the end of its run, earned a domestic total of $352,810.
Each colonist needed a year's provisions to get started, which he had advanced to them. Governor MacCarthy was sure that the African Institution would reimburse Cuffe, but they did not, and he lost over $8,000 () after having to pay high tariff duties as well.Thomas, p. 103. The African Institution in England never contributed to the mission at all, and Cuffe had to deal with hard economic consequences.
Katharinenfeld 1941 Bolnisi (), is a city in the country of Georgia, located in the Kvemo Kartli region and capital of the Bolnisi district. It currently has an estimated 13,800 inhabitants. In 1818 the colony Katharinenfeld was founded in Bolnisi by 95 German colonist families from Swabia. After the occupation of the Red Army in 1921, it was renamed to Luxemburg after the German communist Rosa Luxemburg.
The terms drafted by McKee for an agreement were not particularly favored by the Shasta or American settlers. The reservation was placed in Scott Valley although the majority of the valley was to remain in colonist possession. The location of the Shasta reservation was apparently accepted, albeit grudgingly, by most American colonists of the area. Some had purchased expensive land grants from other Americans.
In 1769, British colonist Daniel Boone created a trail from North Carolina to Tennessee. He spent the next two years exploring Kentucky. In 1773, Captain Thomas Bullitt led the first exploring party into Jefferson County, surveying land on behalf of Virginians who had been awarded land grants for service in the French and Indian War. In 1774, James Harrod began constructing Fort Harrod in Kentucky.
Deane Winthrop (23 March 1623 – 16 March 1704) was the sixth son (the third son by his father's third marriage) of the English Puritan colonist John Winthrop, a founder and the 2nd, 6th, 9th and 12th Governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. His mother was Margaret Tyndal. He was named after his mother's half-brother, Sir John Deane. He outlived all of his full and half-siblings.
"The petition of Thomas Martin and John Coe," The British Colonist (Victoria), Jan. 13, 1863, p. 3. They contracted with J. P. Cranford to build a pipeline into town. The pipes were -long logs that were hollowed out and attached end to end to extend from the spring to the San Francisco Bathhouse on Government Street, from where deliveries were made to customers by wagon.
The responsible design engineer was Wynn Meredith of San Francisco, who had overseen several significant recent engineering projects in British Columbia. Initially, the resident engineer was Harry Hartwell, but he was replaced in July 1912 by Boyd EhleBoyd Ehle from Sanderson & Porter's New York Office."Leaves Victoria for Larger Field: Mr. Harry Hartwell, Resident Engineer on Sooke Lake Work, Accepts New Position," The Daily Colonist, Jul.
Williams was born in 1813 in England, to Burton Williams, a colonist from Trinidad, and his wife Jane; he was the couple's sixth son. In November 1833, after completing his education, Williams was called to the bar of the Inner Temple where he practised as a barrister. Williams was born to a slaveholding family. His father owned some 450 slaves, in Trinidad in the 1820s.
Washburn was born on June 7, 1910, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to a Boston Brahmin family whose roots trace back to Mayflower passenger Elder William Brewster. Brewster was the Pilgrim colonist leader and a spiritual elder of the Plymouth Colony. His father, the Very Rev. Henry Bradford Washburn, Sr. an avid outdoorsman, was dean of the Episcopal Theological School in Cambridge and Edith Buckingham Hall.
After the Austro-Hungarian army disintegrated in November 1918, Czechoslovak troops occupied the area. After the Treaty of Trianon of 1920, the village became officially part of Czechoslovakia. In 1923, as part of the Slovakization, 49 colonist families, mostly from Moravia, were settled into the village. In November 1938, the First Vienna Award granted the area to Hungary and it was held by Hungary until 1945.
The Queen Bee sailed from London, England, for Nelson, New Zealand, on 21 April 1877Wreck of the Queen Bee, pg 2, "Nelson Evening Mail", 11 August 1877 with a large cargo and 30 passengers bound for Nelson, New Zealand and then Napier, New Zealand.Commercial Intelligence, p. 2, "Colonist", 26 July 1877 It cleared The Downs on 24 April. The ship sighted Madeira on 9 May.
Christopher Seider (or Snider) (1758—1770) was a British colonist killed in the political strife that became the American Revolutionary War. He was 11 years old when he was shot and killed by loyalist Ebenezer Richardson in Boston on February 22, 1770. His funeral became a major political event, with his death heightening tensions that erupted into the Boston Massacre on March 5, 1770.
Thomas Carter (1608 – 5 September 1684) was an American colonist and Puritan minister. Educated at Cambridge, he left England and came to American colonies during the Puritan Great Migration. Carter was ordained as a Puritan minister in 1642, becoming the first person in the American colonies to receive a Christian ordination. He served as a church elder and minister in Dedham, Watertown, and Woburn.
By 1558, the disease had spread throughout South America and had arrived at the Plata basin. Colonist violence towards Indigenous peoples accelerated the loss of lives. European colonists perpetrated massacres on the indigenous peoples and enslaved them. According to the U.S. Bureau of the Census (1894), the North American Indian Wars of the 19th century cost the lives of about 19,000 Europeans and 30,000 Native Americans.
In 1747, he founded the Ohio Company of Virginia with fellow Virginian colonists who wished to expand Virginia's territory into the Ohio River Valley. For a period of less than a year, in 1749, he became the de facto Governor of Virginia in place of the absent William Gooch. Lee was favored for an appointment as governor by George II but the colonist died in 1750.
In 1904 George. he established a business on his own account in German Cameroons. German colonist were unable to distinguish between a Black British mulatto and a native African, George was fined for not registering a title to his land as required for all Africans living in German Cameroons and was later expelled. After his exit from German Cameroons, he transferred his operations to Nigeria.
Waters was a migrant to Nelson where he started a boot and shoe making business in Bridge Street in early 1858.Advertisement, p. 1, 'Colonist', 2 March 1858 He was also a member of the Ancient Order of Foresters Benefit Society, being Treasurer of the Court of Robin Hood for almost 15 years. He was noted as being interested in the welfare of others.
A. Lawrence Healey, "His Montreal store held almost a square kilometre of used books: Dean of the city's English-language antiquarian booksellers believed in high volume and low prices". The Globe and Mail, May 30, 2007. In 1991, Russell helped open a Victoria branch with his daughter Diana and her husband Ron DePol.Alan Hustak, "Montreal icon had Victoria connections". Victoria Times-Colonist, March 10, 2007.
After Yugoslav defeat in April War, he was captured by Hungarian army, but he was soon released and, as colonist, he was to forced return in his birth area. There he joined local communist in their preparation for uprising against Independent State of Croatia and Axis occupation. During 1943 and 1943, he was commander of 5th Krajina Division. He led the division during Belgrade Operation.
The subscription room at Lloyd's of London in the early 19th century. Insurance became more sophisticated in Enlightenment era Europe, and specialized varieties developed. Some forms of insurance developed in London in the early decades of the 17th century. For example, the will of the English colonist Robert Hayman mentioned two "policies of insurance" taken out with the diocesan Chancellor of London, Arthur Duck.
All colonists would be required to invest $5 in the commissary, thus ensuring public ownership. Personal freedoms were guaranteed, although the sale of alcohol was banned. The colony would build an Episcopal church, but the building could be used by any denomination. On opening day, Tennessee's Episcopal bishop, the Right Reverend Charles Quintard, chartered Christ Church and licensed colonist Joseph Blacklock as lay reader.
Victoria Times-Colonist, August 25, 1999. They released their debut album Other People's Heavens in 1997, and toured extensively in the United States as an opening act for Ani DiFranco and in Canada as an opening act for Weeping Tile."Canadian duo takes bite out of Big Apple ; Chris Brown and Kate Fenner discover quirky side of making music in New York". Toronto Star, July 22, 1999.
According to the civil court documents, Casor demanded his freedom. "Anthony Johnson was in a feare. Upon this his son in law, his wife and his two sonnes persuaded the said Anthony Johnson to set the said John Casor free." Casor went to work for Robert Parker, an English colonist who, along with his brother George, later testified that they knew Casor had an indenture.
She moved to Tokyo with Roumanoff when he was a diplomat at the Russian mission there; the couple moved to California"Bring to American Music of Russia" The Daily Colonist (June 12, 1918): 9. when the Kerensky government fell. Her mother, brother and sister became refugees in Constantinople by 1921, when she divorced Roumanoff"Russian Beauty" Indianapolis Star (July 6, 1923): 13. via Newspapers.
Living on a farm in rural Alberta while recovering from degenerative arthritis,"Bergmann still kicking the chair away; Arthritis can't dampen spirit of punk". Victoria Times-Colonist, September 4, 2014. he continued to perform sporadic live shows and released two albums of archival demo recordings, but had not recorded a new album since 1998's Design Flaw."CanCon legend is still angry after all these years".
Jesse (or Jessua) Smythes (died 1594) was an English born judge and colonist in Elizabethan Ireland. He held office as Solicitor General for Ireland and Chief Justice of Munster, and was heavily involved in the Plantation of Munster. He was noted for his deep hostility to the native Irish, which was more virulent than that of the average English colonist of the time. Little is known of his family background, his early life, or his career before 1584, when he was appointed Solicitor General for Ireland.Smyth, Constantine Joseph Chronicle of the Law Officers of Ireland Butterworths London 1839 p.174 He was, as far as is known, the first Englishman to hold the office: his appointment was at the personal request of Elizabeth I, who was dissatisfied with the quality of service given by her Irish law officers, and believed that she would be better served by Englishmen.
On 5 March 1838, Nunn submitted a report on his expedition to the newly arrived Governor Gipps. Within the following month the Colony's Executive Council (the Colonial government constituted by the Governor and his advisers) accepted a recommendation of their Attorney General, Mr J. H. Plunkett, that there be an official inquiry into the expedition, including the Aboriginal deaths. The colonial government and the Colonial Office in England were both conscious of a need to extend the rule of law to Aboriginals as well as other "British subjects" in the Colony. On 6 April 1838 the Executive Council decided to issue regulations in the form of a government notice announcing that there would be an inquiry (that is, a coronial inquiry) into the death of any Aboriginal at the hands of a Colonist in the same way as that held when the death of a Colonist occurred through violence or suddenly.
Rebecca married English colonist John Rolfe on April 5, 1614, in Jamestown.John Rolfe Highway MarkerKidnapping of Pocahontas Highway Marker or Pocahontas Highway Marker It was a stop on the Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad in the nineteenth Century which was replaced by, CSXT. Accokeek Furnace Archeological Site, Aquia Church, Public Quarry at Government Island, Redoubt No. 2, and Stafford Training School are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Empire Newspaper 20.11.1857 p8 Jamed Hartwell Williams, a well known colonist and long time American Consul resided at 'Marion' for several years in the early 1870s.NSW Government Gazette 31'3'1874 p995 The estate passed into the hands of developers in the 1880s who renamed it the 'Broadoaks Estate' and 'Broadoaks House'. The remainder of McDonald's land was purchased by E. B. Miller, who built Rose Farm in Honor Street.
Historically, the first American place named Springfield was Springfield, Massachusetts, founded in 1636 by William Pynchon. An early American colonist, Pynchon named Springfield after his hometown in England, Springfield, Essex. Springfield, Massachusetts, became nationally important in 1777, when George Washington founded the United States' National Armory at Springfield. During the 19th century, Springfield became one of the world's leading centers of the Industrial Revolution, pioneering advances in interchangeable parts.
Hotel Maison de Ville building was constructed after the disastrous Great New Orleans Fire of 1788, which destroyed much of 18th century New Orleans. The Maison de Ville was a two- story dwelling built by New France colonist Jean-Baptiste Lilie Sarpy in 1800. The playwright Tennessee Williams (1911-1983) was a frequent guest at the hotel in the 20th century. His favorite room was named in his honor.
Washington state. For the 2014 model year Toyota introduced the 1794 Edition Tundra, designed as a top tier luxury model to compete with the Chevrolet Silverado High Country, GMC Denali, Ford King Ranch and Ram Laramie. The Toyota Tundra plant sits on land that Toyota purchased from the oldest working cattle ranch in Texas. 1794 refers to the year that this ranch was established by Spanish colonist Juan Ignacio de Casanova.
Page 2 Advertisements, Column 1, Colonist, Volume XIV, Issue 1429, 6 June 1871, Page 2 Trask could have acquired the cannons at that time, although this is speculative. What is known is that Trask displayed the cannons outside his home for many years. In February 1906, during the Nelson Carnival, one of the cannons was removed as a prank from outside his house and later recovered by the Police.
In 1955, President Ramon Magsaysay promulgated Administrative Order No. 20 which allowed the distribution of colony lands for cultivation by deserving colonists. This was implemented by the Secretary of Justice Pedro T. Tuazon. and Agriculture and Natural Resources Secretary Juan G. Rodriguez, who granted qualified colonist six hectares of land. President Carlos P. Garcia created a committee on August 16, 1959 to study the state of national prisons.
The John Guy Flag Site in Cupids, created in 1910 to mark the settlement's 300th anniversary. The flagstaff is used to fly a giant Union Jack. John Guy (25 December 1568 – 25 March 1629) was an English merchant adventurer, colonist and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1621 to 1624. He was the first proprietary governor of Newfoundland Colony, the first attempt to establish a colony on Newfoundland.
Effects of F. solani on Alfalfa Hyphae of F. solani Fusarium solani is a species complex of at least 26 closely related filamentous fungi in the division Ascomycota, family Nectriaceae. It is the anamorph of Nectria haematococca. It is a common soil fungus and colonist of plant materials. Fusarium solani is implicated in plant disease as well as human disease notably infection of the cornea of the eye.
Henri Duveyrier in 1864, aged about 24 During the French Second Republic Warnier was a member of the council of the government of Algeria in 1848–49. He returned to private life, and in 1850 founded the Atlas newspaper. This was suppressed after the coup d'état of 2 December 1951. Warnier was one of the last companions of Père Enfantin, and stayed as a colonist in the Sahel of Algiers Province.
Sir Richard Whitbourne (1561 - 1635) was an English colonist, mariner and author. Richard Whitbourne was born near Bishopsteignton in south Devon, England, where he was baptised on 20 June 1561. Whilst apprenticed to a merchant adventurer of Southampton, he sailed extensively around Europe and twice to Newfoundland. He served in a ship of his own against the Great Armada under Lord Admiral Thomas Howard, 1st Earl of Suffolk.
He was the son of William Randolph, a colonist and land owner who played an important role in the history and government of the Commonwealth of Virginia. He and his wife, Mary Isham, are referred to as the "Adam and Eve" of Virginia. William and Elizabeth were the parents of:Saunders, p. 371 Edmund Randolph Yates, who attended William & Mary in 1762; served as a Lt. in Peter Muhlenberg's company 1779.
Kosovo and the Challenge of Humanitarian Intervention: Selective Indignation, Collective action, and International Citizenship. New York: The United Nations University, 2001. p. 20. Numerous colonist Serb families moved into Kosovo, equalising the demographic balance between Albanians and Serbs. Mitrovica, circa 1941. In the winter of 1915–16, during World War I, Kosovo saw the retreat of the Serbian army as Kosovo was occupied by Bulgaria and Austria-Hungary.
Samuel Maverick (1602) was a 17th-century English colonist to the Massachusetts Bay colony. Arriving ahead of the Winthrop Fleet, Maverick became one of the earliest settlers, one of the largest landowners and one of the first slave-owners in Massachusetts. He signed his name as "Mavericke". He is the ancestor of rancher Samuel Maverick, from whom the term maverick for "independently minded" and an unbranded animal derives.
Charles married Elizabeth Goodwyn, and had an orphanage in Coombe Hill, Blackheath. This couple had no children of their own but they raised Maria King, daughter of Philip Gidley King (later governor of New South Wales), until she married Hannibal Hawkins Macarthur, a prominent early colonist of Australia, on 14 February 1813. Mrs. Charles Enderby left her money to a niece, Caroline Hawkins. George Enderby married Henrietta Samson.
The Temne ransacked Granville Town and took some Black Poor into slavery, while others became slave traders. In early 1791 Alexander Falconbridge returned, to find only 64 of the original residents (39 black men, 19 black women, and six white women). The 64 people had been cared for by a Greek and a colonist named Thomas Kallingree at Fourah Bay, an abandoned African village. There the settlers reestablished Granville Town.
Born in Vancouver, British Columbia, MacLennan began his career as a stage actor."Overlooked gem deserves full houses". Victoria Times-Colonist, April 17, 1994. In his first theatre role at age 13, he was cast to play a woman, and later in his career he produced a short performance piece about his fear at the time that his parents would see the play and realize that he was gay.
There was no civil service, no police, no militia, and virtually every British colonist was an employee of the HBC. Frustrated, Blanshard abandoned his post a year later, returning to England. In 1851, his resignation was finalised, and the colonial office appointed Douglas as governor. The Great Seal of the Island of Vancouver and its Dependencies was designed by Benjamin Wyon, Chief Engraver of Her Majesty's Seals, c. 1849.
According to certain versions, it was killed by a local who, having fallen in love with the young lady, became jealous of the friendship. According to other versions, it is a French colonist called Cauchon who killed the animal. This legend is told and sung by griots and has been recorded by several Malian musicians. In 2005, the Dansa-Diawoura Festival ended with a day dedicated to the legend.
East of the Mississippi River, slavery was prohibited north of the Ohio River by the 1787 law creating the Northwest Territory. A marker at the Cumberland Gap National Historical Park denotes where the boundaries of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia intersect. Under the Royal Proclamation of 1763 it also marks how far west a British American colonist was allowed to reside. Its exact location is N 36'36.045, W 83'40.518.
After the Pacific Railway Act of 1862, the west experienced a large boom in colonist population—and a large decline in bison population. As railways expanded, military troops and supplies were able to be transported more efficiently to the Plains region. Some railroads even hired commercial hunters to feed their laborers. William Frederick "Buffalo Bill" Cody, for example, was hired by the Kansas Pacific Railroad for this reason.
Francis Sandow is the last surviving human born in the 20th century. An early space colonist, he spent long centuries of space travel in suspended animation. After his last such trip, he woke in the 27th Century, where everything had changed. Desperate for something to hold to, he sought out a mentor, who happened to be a member of a very long-lived and slowly dying alien race, the Pei'ans.
Holland Island was originally settled in the 1600s, taking its name from early colonist Daniel Holland, the original purchaser of the property from the Dorchester County Sheriff. By 1850, the first community of fishing and farming families developed on the island. By 1910, the island had about 360 residents, making it one of the largest inhabited islands in the Chesapeake Bay. The island community had 70 homes, stores and other buildings.
Victoria Times Colonist, April 17, 2008 In 2009 Cockburn travelled to Afghanistan to visit his brother, Medical Officer Capt. John Cockburn, and to play a concert for Canadian troops. He performed his 1984 song "If I Had a Rocket Launcher" and was temporarily awarded an actual rocket launcher by the military. Cockburn has stated that, while unsure of the original Invasion of Afghanistan, he supported Canada's role there.
Gunnery Sergeant Apone (Al Matthews) is the squad leader of the Colonial Marines sent to investigate LV-426. During the first incursion into the atmospheric processor, he enforces Gorman's orders not to use pulse rifle and smartgun ammunition. Shortly after finding a surviving, cocooned colonist whose chest bursts to reveal an Alien, Apone grabs a flamethrower from Frost to incinerate it. In the subsequent Alien attack, he is captured alive.
Bassist Morgan Waters, guitarist Nick Rose, and drummer Tyler Kyte all had acting careers in Canada prior to the formation of Sweet Thing. (Waters won two Gemini Awards for the television series Cock'd Gunns and one for The Morgan Waters Show.)Devlin, Mike (September 8, 2010). "Self-parody can be oh so sweet", Times-Colonist, p. C1. The band took their name from the song by Van Morrison.
In 1854, Meusebach was appointed by Governor Elisha Pease as a special commissioner to settle colonist titles to land promised by the Verein between 1845 and 1846.Solms (2000) p.148 The Republic of Texas had originally promised the colonists 640 acres apiece for a married couple, or 320 acres for unmarried colonists. When the original colonists settled on their promised acreage, the Verein had kept one half of the allotment.
9, "Burning of Schenectady", History of the Schenectady Patent in the Dutch and English Times, 1883, pp. 244-270 His younger brother was Myndert Schuyler (1672–1755), who also served as Mayor of Albany. His paternal grandparents were Pieter Tjercks Van Schuylder and Geertruyt Philips and his uncle was Philip Pieterse Schuyler (1628–1683), the prominent colonist landowner. Through his uncle, he was first cousins with Gertruj Schuyler (b.
Ida Chong (; born 1956 or 1957)Economics changing: Comfortable neighbourhoods now encompass young, old, rich and poor: [Final Edition] Harnett, Cindy EView Profile. Times - Colonist [Victoria, B.C] 12 May 2005: A4. is a British Columbia politician who served as MLA for Oak Bay-Gordon Head from 1996 until 2013. Chong and BC NDP MLA Jenny Kwan together became the first Chinese- Canadian members of the BC Legislative Assembly.
Despite its difficult political and financial beginnings, the new Victoria Public Library that opened on May 10, 1889, fulfilled a clear and present need. According to a Colonist newspaper article, "Since the closing of the Mechanics' Institute, Victorians in the commoner walks of life have sorely missed the opportunities afforded of obtaining good and instructive reading [material]." The first book lent was The Life of Hon. George Brown.
Arrol was a radio announcer in Vancouver and Calgary in the 1940s and 1950s until graduating from University of British Columbia and teachers college, teaching in Vancouver in the early 1960s and for the Scarborough Board of Education (at Woburn Collegiate Institute) in the late 1960s and early 1970s.Obituary. Globe and Mail. June 21, 2000. He also was a reporter with the Daily Colonist in Victoria BC in the mid-1960s.
In July 1843, a man named Ronald Macallister was killed by Aboriginal men near Port Albert. The Scottish colonist and pastoralist, Angus McMillan, led a group of around 20 colonists to attack and kill several groups of Aboriginal people across a number of days. The group was known as the "Highland Brigade". Some historical accounts assert that around 60 people were killed, but other survivors said the number was 150–180.
"Miramar" means "sea view" in Spanish. The name was chosen by the first European to settle in the area, Scotsman James Coutts Crawford (1817-1889). Crawford was a former Royal Navy officer turned businessman and colonist, who arrived in Wellington in 1840. He established a farm on the peninsula, which at the time was known as Watt's Peninsula, and drained a large lagoon known to early European settlers as Burnham Water.
Their children also became interpreters for the Mohawk. Some variants of Ots-Toch's legend claim that her father was French, Jaques Hertel. In local lore, Ots-Toch is often compared to Pocahontas, another 17th century Native American who married a European colonist. But Pocahontas eventually moved to Great Britain and converted to Christianity, whereas Ots-Toch remained with the Mohawk and is reported to have rejected European religion.
In 1689, following the Glorious Revolution (English Revolution of 1688), in which William and Mary acceded to the throne, German-born colonist Jacob Leisler seized the fort in what was called Leisler's Rebellion. He represented the common people against a group of wealthy leaders represented by Pieter Stuyvesant and others and enacted a government of direct popular representation. By some accounts, he also acted to redistribute wealth to the poor.
Trench on the sete de setembro st. during the siege of Bagé, 1893. The disagreements began with the concentration of troops under the command of the maragato João Nunes da Silva Tavares, the Joca Tavares, Baron of Itaqui in fields of the woodworking, in Uruguay, locality near Bagé. Shortly after the potrero of Ana Correia, coming from Uruguay towards Rio Grande do Sul, was the federalist caudillo colonist Gumercindo Saraiva.
Jamestown, Virginia, Matthew Scrivener, third colonial governor, drowned 1609 Matthew Scrivener (1580 - January 7, 1609) was an English colonist in Virginia. He served briefly as acting governor of Jamestown, but drowned while attempting to cross to nearby Hog Island in a storm in 1609. Eight other colonists were also drowned, half of them members of the governing Council, including Bartholomew Gosnold's brother Anthony. Scrivener was succeeded by Captain John Smith.
Riggio, A., 125 Centoventicinque anni di storia della geografia italiana: la Società Geografica Italiana: 1867-1992, Roma 1992, pp 190-192 He illustrated a book (1942) about African (Ethiopian) travels by the colonist Conte Augusto Salimbeni, where he was described as a pittore africanista.Vita africana di Augusto Salimbeni : con illustrazioni fuori testo del pittore africanista Augusto Valli e documenti inediti. Gino Benvenuti; Augusto Valli, Publisher:Modena : Tip. Ferraguti, 1942.
The series, which stars Angela Griffin in the lead role of Detective Stevie Hall,"Small Screen: 90210 star embraces adult role in The Detail". Times-Colonist, Bill Brioux / The Canadian Press. March 20, 2018 features a trio of female homicide detectives who solve crimes while dealing with their own personal lives."Degrassi star Shenae Grimes-Beech to star in CTV drama 'The Detail'". CTV News Toronto, March 16, 2018.
But when Implementation continues to take colonists to the banks, they would assume that necessity had given way to malevolence. Every colonist on Plateau would revolt. At least half the population would perish in the conflict, and technological civilization might come to an end. Thus, the political figure Parlette wants to negotiate a replacement for the Covenant of Planetfall with the rebels in advance, and thereby prevent such a conflict.
Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, William Smith, Editor.Gaius Mallius was a colonist of Fiesole who, according to Sallust (Bellum Catilinae 24.2), was the first to raise an army and take the field against Rome. His nomen is often confused with the more common Manlius. Fiesole was the scene of Stilicho's great victory over the Germanic hordes of the Vandals and Suebi under Radagaisus in 406.
On December 16, 1826 the rebels rode into Nacogdoches and raised a flag of independence. On December 21, 1826 Edwards signed a document declaring the Republic of Fredonia, which would comprise land from the Sabine River to the Rio Grande. On December 13, 1826 Mexican Colonel Mateo Ahumada and Saucedo moved against the Texas rebels. Austin rallied the other colonist against Edwards and his attempt at open rebellion.
A colonist, Mr. Blank, paced off an acre of his quarter section for a cemetery. Almost ninety years after the first settlers arrived, descendants, neighbours, and friends of the Hirsch Colonists attended the consecration and designation of the Hirsch Cemetery as a Saskatchewan historic site. The Hirsch Jewish Cemetery can be found along Highway 18, just west of Hirsch. The original synagogue still exists but has been converted into a home.
William Spence (sometimes shown as Spense) was an early Virginia colonist on Jamestown Island. He was member of the first assembly of the Virginia House of Burgesses in Jamestown, Virginia in 1619. Spence became an ensign in the local militia and is thus sometimes identified as Ensign William Spence or Ensign Spence. He was an early farmer on Jamestown Island, a tobacco taster and landowner at Archer's Hope.
In 1617, Louis Hebert a colonist in Quebec began to raise cattle and grow peas, grain and corn on a very small plot. In the 1640s, charter companies promoted agriculture and settlers cleared forested land with the use of axes, oxen, horses and asses. In 1663, Louis XIV, through his colonial administrators Colbert and Jean Talon took steps to promote the cultivation of hops and hemp and the raising of livestock.
In the early 1600s, colonist John Guy of the Cupids plantation referred to people living in the Clarke's Beach area, which could have included North River or South River. Permanent settlement, however, most likely started in the mid 1800s. Historically, what is now called North River was known as Northern Gut, while the name North Valley also appears on some maps. North River has traditionally been a fishing and agricultural community.
He also worked with Samuel Thompson on the United Empire and the Daily Colonist, two journals published in Toronto. In 1855 his essay on Canada and her Resources was awarded the first prize of the Paris Exhibition Committee. In 1857, he was elected to the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada for Grey. He went missing in December 1859 and was found 16 months later floating in the Don River.
By the end of the decade, both the farms and the livestock had been sold. A more lucrative venture was the owning, and later breeding, of racehorses. In 1949, Churchill had purchased Colonist II, which won its first race, the Upavon Stakes, at Salisbury that year, and subsequently netted Churchill £13,000 in winnings. In 1955, Churchill bought the Newchapel Stud and by 1961 his total prize money from racing exceeded £70,000.
He was apparently ignorant that Francis Drake sailed through open sea to the south of Tierra del Fuego in 1578, proving it to be an island and not, as Magellan had supposed, part of Terra Australis. La Popelinière, the would be colonist, gave no indication that he thought that anyone, French, Portuguese or otherwise, had visited the part of Terra Australis shown on the Dieppe maps as "Jave la Grande".
Mayflower in Plymouth Harbor by William Halsall (1882) George Soule (c. 1601 – between 20 September 1677 and 22 January 1679)A genealogical profile of George Soule, (a collaboration of Plimoth Plantation and New England Historic Genealogical Society accessed 2013) was a colonist who was one of the indentured servants on the Mayflower and helped establish Plymouth Colony in 1620. He was one of the signers of the Mayflower Compact.
'Balaclava Rapist' broke parole conditions, CTV.ca News Staff, January 18, 2008 His parole was subsequently revoked in 2013.Victoria halfway house resident 'balaclava rapist' back behind bars, Victoria Times Colonist, November 7, 2013. In 2016, the board denied Correctional Service's request for full parole, instead granting day parole with a number of conditions. Eric Norman Fish was released to a halfway house in 2004 in Vernon, British Columbia.
Some of the more famous characters were the governors Nathaniel Butler and Philip Bell, Bell's father-in-law Daniel Elfrith, and William Rous. Philip Bell was the first governor and was replaced by Robert Hunt, due to conflict with another colonist. Nathaniel Butler later replaced Hunt. Many of these men had already had experience with England's colonizing and economic expeditions with the Virginia Company and the Somers (Bermuda) Company.
In 1584 he was elected knight of the shire for Berkshire and again in 1586. In 1587 he went as a colonist to Munster but was recalled due to the imminent threat of the Spanish Armada. Afterwards he went as a captain on the Portuguese expedition (the English Armada) led by Sir John Norreys, but returned in bad health to die in 1589. He was succeeded by his brother Henry.
Deer Lodge was originally situated around a tract of land acquired by the Davidson family in the early 1800s. In 1845, James Davidson built a grist mill and saw mill on the land. In 1876, Peter Fox purchased the land and attempted to establish a sheep ranch, but was unsuccessful. Deer Lodge Congregational Church, built in 1889 In 1884, Fox sold the land to Abner Ross, a former Rugby colonist.
Dr. William Primm, for whom the town was originally named, was an early colonist from a family of wealthy aristocrats in Virginia. He owned a plantation on more than a league of land in western Fayette County, with 2,200 acres under cultivation. After emancipation, Primm's plantation employed 80 tenants to maintain its reputation as one of the best plantations in the area. 600 to 900 bales of cotton were harvested annually.
Logan states that the colonists should be grateful to still be alive, and that he has no regrets. Carrie, disillusioned by the whole affair, decides to end her partnership with Logan. If the player sides with Coretech, Carrie will quit on the spot, disgusted by Logan's willingness to commit mass murder for money. Logan will kill all the armed male colonists defending the colony, finally assassinating the colonist leader John Brown.
Captain Johnston was described as one of the Murray's most successful navigators, and a loyal, intelligent, and enterprising colonist. He was a strong swimmer, and was reckoned to have saved from drowning no less than fourteen lives, among them a Mrs. Padman and her daughter, and was honored with a medal from the Royal Humane Society. Though industrious and enterprising in business matters, he was a liberal and earnest Christian.
Since 1920, Samanhudi became inactive in the party. His health declined, but his interest on national movements never calmed down. He retreated from the public spotlight, until after Indonesia's independence, when he resumed his activity. In participation of defending Republic of Indonesia against the formerly-colonist Dutch military aggression, Samanhudi formed Solo Branch of Indonesian Rebel Front (Barisan Pemberontak Indonesia Cabang Solo) and Pancasila Union Branch (Cabang Persatuan Pancasila).
Following Vultura Freeway, however, Bergmann withdrew from the music business for several years, due to health difficulties with degenerative arthritis."Bergmann still kicking the chair away; Arthritis can't dampen spirit of punk". Victoria Times-Colonist, September 4, 2014. In 2009 Bergmann's bassist Ray Fulber compiled the CD Lost Art Bergmann, which featured early demo versions of most of the songs that appeared on the 1988 John Cale produced album.
Around 1634–1635 the four-year terms of the indentured servants expired, and planters demanded the right to use slaves in their place. One colonist spoke out against this practice, saying that Christians should not hold slaves. Bell silenced this man on instructions from the Company, so he could not stir up the slaves against their masters. When the English arrived, they found a small group of Dutch privateers living there.
Originally a captured gun or "war trophy" contributed to the setting; however, this has now gone. The pedestal of the memorial is a standard A L Petrie design, first used in 1918 at Ebbw Vale. Andrew Lang Petrie was the grandson of Andrew Petrie, an early colonist of Queensland and a prominent architect-builder. When Petrie Senior died in 1872, he was succeeded by his son John Petrie.
Colonists would cut down the trees and then allow their cattle and livestock to graze freely in the forest and never plant more trees. The animals trampled and tore up the ground so much as to cause long-term destruction and damage. Soil exhaustion was a huge problem in New England agriculture. Farming with oxen did allow the colonist to farm more land but it increased erosion and decreased soil fertility.
As Romea runs to her aid, she is held back and a Colonist approaches Martha with a large spanner. An Artificial protects her and Martha screams out for the fighting to stop. The Doctor arrives and orders the same thing and the fighting stops when he takes order of the ship. The Doctor reveals that he'd seen the Pilot's log and discovered that the Artificials were linked to the Pilot System.
Sion Harris (1811 - April 25, 1854) was an American-born Liberian colonist and politician. An emancipated slave, he emigrated to Liberia in 1830 and engaged in a string of adventures, most notably thwarting an attack on the Heddington mission by an army of Loma tribesmen in 1840. He later served in Liberia's House of Representatives.Durwood Dunn, An Abolitionist in the Appalachian South (University of Tennessee Press (1997), pp. 33–34.
Back in England, he was elected to the Bristol Society of Merchant Venturers, and he was then elected as the treasurer of the merchant venturers from 1611 to 1612 and then returned the next year with more livestock and female settlers. In 1612 the actions of the English pirate - Peter Easton convinced Guy to abandon a second colony established at Renews in the spring of that year and strengthen the fortifications at Cupers Cove. At one point Guy and three other colonists in a canoe were attacked by the pirates, and captured, the colonist with the musket was injured. The pirates were discussing how was the best way to execute John Guy and his men, when they escaped with the help of a former colonist who had decided to throw in his lot with the pirates, but who remembered the help John Guy had given him in the past, and wasn't prepared to stand aside whilst his former friend was possibly murdered.
Later, Mayerson discusses his experience with a neo-Christian colonist and they conclude that either Eldritch became a god in the Prox system or some god-like being has taken his place. Mayerson is convinced some aspect of Eldritch is still inside him, and that as long as he refuses to take Chew-Z again, it is Eldritch who will actually be killed by Bulero in the near future; Mayerson is half-resigned, half-hopeful about taking on the life of a Martian colonist without reprieve. Mayerson considers the possibility of Eldritch being what humans have always thought of as a god, but inimical, or perhaps merely an inferior aspect of a bigger and better sort of god. The novel has an ambiguous ending, with Bulero heading back toward Earth, and apparent proliferation of Eldritch's cyborg body 'stigmata', which may mean that Bulero is still trapped in Eldritch's hallucinatory domain, or that Chew-Z is becoming increasingly popular among Terrans and Martian colonists.
The Colonist (Sydney) 6 August 1835, p. 6. Online reference She was reported to have been 105 years old when she died but some historians have disputed this because her convict records show that she would have been about 93 at her time of death.People Australia website “Eccles, Elizabeth (Betty) (1742–1835)”. Online reference She arrived in the colony in 1788 on the Lady Penrhyn which was one of the ships of the First Fleet.
Christopher Levett, of York: The Pioneer Colonist in Casco Bay, James Baxter Phinney,1893 But his efforts yielded little interest, and Levett never returned to Maine. He did sail to Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1630 to confer with Governor John Winthrop, but died during return passage to England. It's unknown what became of the men he left behind at Machigonne. Fort Levett, built in 1894 on Cushing Island in Portland Harbor, is named for him.
Victoria Times-Colonist, November 2, 1993. Following the Ottawa performance at Lansdowne Stadium, the promoters faced charges under the city's bylaw for the sound exceeding the maximum permitted decibel level for public events."Charges follow rock concert at Lansdowne". Ottawa Citizen, August 10, 1993. The second tour in 1995 featured Blues Traveler, Matthew Sweet, Eric's Trip, Rheostatics, Spirit of the West, Ziggy Marley and the Melody Makers and The Inbreds,"The long and winding roadside".
There were no other witnesses to the murder.Fred Braches,"Murder on the Pitt River," The News, Maple Ridge BC, 27 April 2010. The motive of the murder had probably more to do with liquor rather than, as some have suggested, gold. Both Bee and Seymour had before done hard labour for selling liquor to First Nations people.Daily Columbian, New Westminster, BC, 26 April 1882 and Daily Colonist, Victoria, BC, 10 June 1887.
Pedigree and arms of Washington John Washington (1631–1677) was an English planter, soldier, and politician in colonial Virginia in North America. He was a lieutenant colonel in the local militia. Born in Hertfordshire, England, he settled in Westmoreland County, Virginia. He is the patriarch of the Washington family, being the colonist paternal English ancestor and great- grandfather of George Washington, general of the Continental Army and first president of the United States of America.
Bolan grew up in Courtenay on Vancouver Island. She was a writer in high school, contributing to the Comox District Free Press and she sent stories on the bus to Victoria to be published in the daily Times Colonist newspaper. While attending the University of Victoria she worked as sports editor of The Oak Bay Star. Bolan then graduated with a Master's degree in journalism from the University of Western Ontario in the 1980s.
Because signs of technology led the Gbaba to past emergency colonies, the mission on Safehold restricts all industrialization. Excepting Shan-Wei's team and his own trusted supporters, Administrator Eric Langhorne erases the memory of every colonist. Yet Langhorne follows his own plan: the colonists awaken programmed to believe they are the first humans, newly created by divine will. They worship Langhorne as the leader of God's "Archangels", charged with guiding a permanent pretechnical society.
Henry Woodward became an interpreter and Indian agent for the fledgling colony. Starting in 1670, Woodward began taking a series of expeditions into the interior, making contact with various Indian groups. While a few Spanish expeditions had explored the interior of the American southeast in the sixteenth century, Woodward was the first English colonist to do so. Notably, Woodward was the last European to visit the paramount chiefdom of Cofitachequi in 1670.
The first white colonist settlement began around 1807. Native Americans settled the land many years before. The Town of Wolcott was formed 1807 from the Town of Junius in Seneca County, New York before the creation of Wayne County, but the town was not completely organized until 1810. The land on which the town was formed on was previously inhabited by Cayuga and Onondaga Native Americans, who were exiled by white European colonists.
Montowampate was described by Governor Thomas Dudley as being "of a far worse disposition" than his brother Wonohaquaham. On March 26, 1631, Montowampate went to Governor John Winthrop for assistance after he was defrauded of twenty beaver pelts by a colonist named Watts, who soon returned to England. Winthrop gave the leader a letter of introduction to Emanuel Downing, a London attorney. It is believed that Montowampate may have traveled to England to claim remuneration.
The Pier 21 Story exhibition shows visitors what it was like to immigrate through Pier 21 between 1928 and 1971. Visitors can open replica children's trunks to see what five immigrant children might have brought with them to Canada, walk through a replica of the colonist train cars that newly arrived immigrants boarded for the next stage of their journey, and even dress up as some of the key staff and volunteers at Pier 21.
William Collier (1671) was an English colonist in Massachusetts. He came to Plymouth Colony in 1633 as one of the few London-based Merchant Adventurers, a colony investment group, to settle in New England. He was often elected as an Assistant Governor in the thirty-some years between 1634/5 and 1665. He was on the side of the government leaders in the historic 1645 dispute with liberal religious leader William Vassall.
Nazi official Arthur Greiser > welcoming millionth German colonist in occupied Poland - March 1944. German > settlement in the former eastern territories of Germany and pre-war Poland > dates back to the medieval Ostsiedlung. Germany used the presence and the > alleged persecution of Volksdeutsche as propaganda tools in preparation for > the invasion of Poland in 1939. With the invasion, Poland was partitioned > between Germany and the Soviet Union according to the Molotov–Ribbentrop > Pact.
Boy then expanded to a five-man band with new members guitarist James Robertson of Toronto; drummer Maurie Kaufmann from Nanaimo; bassist Steve Payne from Winnipeg; and guitarist Rolla Olak from Victoria.Devlin, Mike (November 11, 2004). "Boy, this Island pair helps Yukon rocker mine for gold", Times-Colonist, p. D6. The 2004 album Every Page You Turn, produced by Brenndan McGuire of Sloan fame, was recorded on Vancouver Island, in a cabin.
The colonists began a series of meetings, across the Black Sea coast. On March 18, 1917, colonist representatives met in Odessa to organize a provisional government. They were joined on March 28, by representatives of the "All-Russian Federation of Russian Germans" ("Allrussischer Bund russischer Deutscher"). Representatives of the Odessa committee then sent organizers to conduct meetings and promote the creation of local committees in the major towns and cities of the region.
Piła traces its origins to an old fishing village, according to the website of the city Following the German colonist movement of the 13th century, and particularly after the end of the 1241 Mongolian invasions, many German colonizers came to this densely wooded area of the Kingdom of Poland. General immigration of German settlers diminished, however, when Poland, under King Casimir IV Jagiellon (1447–92), finally defeated the Teutonic Order in 1466.
He went to Jamaica where he became a successful colonist. In 1689 Lloyd was petitioning for the post of Clerk of the crown and peace for Jamaica and was appointed to the post in 1690. He married Mary Guy, daughter of Richard Guy, planter of Jamaica, on 24 July 1690. In 1691, he became a member of the Jamaican Assembly and came in for criticism from the governor of Jamaica, Lord Inchiquin.
Wołyń Voivodeship, 1928 Osadniks (, "settler/settlers, colonist/colonists") were veterans of the Polish Army and civilians who were given or sold state land in the Kresy (current Western Belarus and Western Ukraine) territory ceded to Poland by Polish-Soviet Riga Peace Treaty of 1921 (and occupied by the Soviet Union in 1939 and ceded to it after World War II). The Polish word was also a loanword that was used in the Soviet Union.
Lewis MacKenzie at the wheel of his Formula Ford car on Friday, 28 August 2009, as part of the NAPA 200 race weekend on Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal. MacKenzie is reportedly a lifelong automobile racing enthusiast. According to an article in the 23 September 2007 Victoria Times Colonist, he is an enthusiastic, skilled, and competitive race car driver having won the 2007 Diamond Class Ontario championship for Formula Fords at the age of 67.
At the , Port Campbell had a population of 599. At the , Port Campbell had a population of 618. Port Campbell is now a popular tourist destination for visiting The Twelve Apostles, located 12 kilometres to the east of the town and the Port Campbell National Park, as well as maintaining a small crayfishing community. The port and the town are named after Captain Alexander Campbell, a whaler and colonist of the Port Fairy region.
The TARDIS crew arrive on an abandoned space station in orbit above Earth Colony Phoenix, a remote human colony whose inhabitants are not only cut off from Earth, but also from each other. Each colonist lives in ous own individual cell, travelling between them only via transmat, creating a population afflicted with agoraphobia. However, the colony hides a deeper secret, one which the Fifth Doctor, Peri and Erimem must uncover before it's too late.
The American poet Robert Lowell adapted this story into one of the three plays in his trilogy The Old Glory, first produced by the American Place Theatre in New York City in 1964. Lowell's version combines parts of this story with another Hawthorne short story, "Endicott and the Red Cross," and with sections from the early American colonist Thomas Morton's book New Canaan. Howard Hanson's opera Merry Mount is loosely based on the story.
Alnus incana is a light-demanding, fast-growing tree that grows well on poorer soils. In central Europe, it is a colonist of alluvial land alongside mountain brooks and streams, occurring at elevations up to . However, it does not require moist soil, and will also colonize screes and shallow stony slopes. In the northern part of its range, it is a common tree species at sea level in forests, abandoned fields and on lakeshores.
The song features electronic blips, string movements, and upbeat percussion breaks. Mesfin Fekadu of Times Colonist wrote that the song is "smooth, airy and full of sexual innuendoes, and it transitions into something that's heaven-like." Timberlake sings in a falsetto voice and refers to a mature woman as his strawberry bubblegum in the song's lyrics. Joey Guerra of The Houston Chronicle remarked that the eccentric song recalls the work of Prince.
Rice: Silas and Timothy Rice, English colonist children, were taken captive on August 8, 1704 from Marlborough (now Westborough), Massachusetts during a French-Indian raid of Queen Anne's War.McAleer, Beth and Robert V. Rice. (2005). "Y-DNA Secures Identity of Rice Mohawk Native American with Edmund Rice Haplotype," New England Ancestors, 6(4):48-50. The captives were taken to Kahnawake, where both the young boys were adopted by Mohawk families and baptized as Catholics.
His eldest son, also named Jean Guyon, married Élisabeth Couillard, daughter of :fr:Guillaume Couillard, New France's first settler to be ennobled by Louis XIV, and granddaughter of Louis Hébert, the first French colonist established with his family in New France. Their wedding was accompanied by the "two violins...which had not been seen yet in Canada." After his death in 1693, his heirs engaged in a protracted legal dispute over his lands.
The Times Colonist has seen like most Canadian daily newspapers a decline in circulation, although the decline has not been as severe as in other markets. Its total circulation dropped by percent to 58,297 copies daily from 2009 to 2015. However, from 2016 to present, the average press run was below 31,000 copies daily. :::::::::Daily average Figures refer to the total circulation (print and digital combined) which includes paid and unpaid copies.
The Percé Rock contains 150 species of different fossils such as brachiopod, trilobites, dalmanites, corals and marine worms from the Devonian period. Originally, the Percé Rock was inferred as connected to the main land. When Jacques Cartier, the first colonist arrived here in 1534, he reported three arches in the massive rock formation. In time, two of the arches disappeared, with the last one collapsing on June 17, 1845, leaving a separated pillar.
The treaty terms drafted by McKee were not particularly favored by the Shasta or American settlers. The reservation was placed in Scott Valley, although the majority of the valley was to remain in colonist possession. The area specified in the treaty for the reservation was estimated by McKee to contain four or five square miles of arable land.The location of the Shasta reservation was apparently accepted, albeit grudgingly, by most American colonists of the area.
The Staff was presented to the officers of the Chilean corvette O'Higgins in 1870 by the French colonist Dutrou-Bornier, who claimed that it had belonged to an ariki (king). At that point it disappeared, but in 1876 it was given to the director of the Museo Nacional de Historia Natural, Rudolf Philippi. This is the only incised kouhau (staff) that remains, the sole remnant of a corpus once as numerous as the tablets.
Mason grew up in Tsawassen. Mason graduated from Langara College's journalism program. He started his career with the Victoria Times Colonist before moving to the Vancouver Sun, where he worked for nineteen years as sports section editor and provincial political affairs. Mason was hired by the Globe as part of an effort to expand the publication to British Columbia readers in 2005; his familiarity to local readers was a factor in his hiring.
Born in London in 1938, she emigrated to Toronto with her parents in the 1950s, where she attended the University of Toronto, gaining a graduate degree in Leisure Service Administration.Victoria Times-Colonist, 7 March 2013. She later moved to Victoria, British Columbia, where she produced the musical The Wonder of it All at the Royal British Columbia Museum.Mel Atkey, Broadway North: The Dream of a Canadian Musical Theatre, (2006) Natural Heritage Books, pp. 199–200.
Her debut novel, The Second Life of Samuel Tyne, written at the age of 24,Mike Devlin, "Colwood author Esi Edugyan back with new novel", Times Colonist, September 8, 2018. was published in 2004 and was shortlisted for the Hurston- Wright Legacy Award in 2005."Esi Edugyan: History, Culture, and Belonging", The Douglas Review, May 1, 2017. Despite favourable reviews for her first novel, Edugyan had difficulty securing a publisher for her second fiction manuscript.
William Dalby (January 28, 1839 - January 22, 1916) was a merchant, real estate and insurance agent and political figure in British Columbia, Canada. He was mayor of Victoria, British Columbia from April 15, 1873 when he was selected to replace mayor James D. RobinsonDaily Colonist April 16th 1873 to 1875. He was born in Richmond Hill, Upper Canada and came to Victoria with John Grant in 1862. Dalby established a tannery and manufacturing business there.
Times Colonist, 5 Jan 2016. Molly Johnson, Kyree Vibrant, Monika Deol, Ed the Sock, Moxy Früvous, Greg Keelor, Albert Schultz, Sophia Perlman, and Ralph Benmergui. Many singers, such as Michael Bublé, DK Ibomeka, Serafin LaRiviere, Sophie Milman, and Lyne Tremblay, have also gone on to do their own recordings and tours since guesting with the band. Vocalists include Julie Michels, Alex Pangman, Jef "Vegas" Farquharson, Mariève Herington, Heather Bambrick and Roger Clown.
Order of the Golden Age In 1886, a German colonist couple, Elisabeth Förster-Nietzsche and Bernhard Förster, emigrated to the Paraguayan rainforest and founded Nueva Germania to put to practice utopian ideas about vegetarianism and the superiority of the Aryan race, though the vegetarian aspect would prove short-lived.Riniker, C., "Autorschaftsinszenierung und Diskursstörungen in Christian Krachts und David Woodards Five Years (2011)," in J. Bolton, et al., eds., German Monitor 79 (Leiden: Brill Publishers, 2016).
In October 2008, Telus was named one of British Columbia's Top Employers by Mediacorp Canada Inc., which was announced by The Vancouver Sun, The Province and the Victoria Times-Colonist. In recent years, the company has been accused of taking actions to hinder the emergence of competition in Canadian telecommunications. This, along with other industry concerns, has led to consumer and industry pressure to reform the regulatory system governing the Canadian telecommunications industry.
The candy bar protest in Edmonton, Alberta. By April 29, the strike had spread to nearby Victoria, British Columbia, the provincial capital, where an estimated 200 children stormed the city's legislature building. The city's Times Colonist newspaper of April 30 carried the story with the headline "Children Invade Legislature building", along with a photograph of placard-carrying children on the legislature's steps. As news coverage of the strike increased, the strike spread east.
By the late 1850s, especially with Victoria’s growth as a port in response to the gold rushes on the Fraser River in 1858 and in the Cariboo in 1861, transport of water by wagon was becoming impractical."The Question of Water Supply," The British Colonist (Victoria), Oct. 31, 1862, p. 2. In 1863, entrepreneurs John Coe and Thomas Martin undertook to dig a shaft at the spring that greatly increased the flow of water.
He recommended that the city continue to use the then existing source but with extensive improvements, and if possible to acquire the Esquimalt Water Works Company which was then drawing water from Thetis Lake but also held the rights to the Goldstream Lakes. Adams considered Sooke Lake as a possible source, but members of city council thought it too expensive.”Expurgated Report on the Waterworks Improvements,” The Daily Colonist, Jun. 23, 1905, pp. 1-3.
Their Dogs Came With Them was published in 2007 and has been receiving growing popularity. Kate Soto writes that Viramontes looks to critique colonist abuses, exposing in particular the problems with highway construction. The title and the story work to expose how the Quarantine Authority controlled Latinos in Los Angeles, using their ownership of dogs as an excuse. Representing the power and abuse of government, the story illustrates how the people were mistreated and used.
Valentin was an artisan colonist, born in Santa Bárbara, in the municipality of Bento Gonçalves, son of Italian immigrants from the village of Poffabro, municipality of Frisanco, in the region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia, northeastern Italy.I discendenti dell’impero commerciale brasiliano “Tramontina” ospiti a Frisanco TelePordenone. (Setembro, 2013). In 1911, he moved to Carlos Barbosa, in the mountain region of the state of Rio Grande do Sul, because the railroad meant a prospect of expansion.
These attempts met with strong reprisals from the English, ultimately resulting in the near destruction of the tribe. Through his daughter Pocahontas (and her marriage to the English colonist John Rolfe), Wahunsunacock was the grandfather of Thomas Rolfe. In 1635 Rolfe returned to Virginia from England. Although he was raised an Englishman, he did honor his Native American heritage and even visited his uncle, Opchanacanough, along with his aunt, “Cleopatra” upon returning to Jamestown.
The youngest son of Donald Campbell (1833-1907),Death of Mr. Donald Campbell, The (Launceston) Examiner, (Tuesday, 30 July 1907), p.5; Obituary: Mr. D. Campbell: An Old and Respected Colonist, The (Launceston) Daily Telegraph, (Tuesday, 30 July 1907), p.5. and his second wife, Elizabeth Campbell (1825-1910), née Brumby,Deaths: Campbell, The (Launceston) Examiner, (Wednesday, 12 January 1910), p.1. Colin Mansfield Campbell was born at Cressy, Tasmania on 13 August 1872.
Fred Williams began his newspaper career in January 1882 at the age of 19 serving first at the Montreal Herald and later at the Montreal Gazette. His career in journalism would span more than sixty years. He also served The Montreal Star, The Toronto News, The Ottawa Free Press, The Victoria Colonist, The Vancouver Sun, The Toronto Mail and Empire, and The Globe and Mail. He went to Australia as a reporter from 1893–1896.
Lieut. Joseph Judson ( - October 8, 1690) was an early New England colonist best known for co-founding the town of Woodbury, Connecticut. The Judson family, including the teen-aged Joseph Judson, settled in Concord, Massachusetts Bay Colony, in about 1634. Five years later they were among the first settlers in Stratford, Connecticut Colony. He left Stratford to help establish the town of Woodbury in 1672 after religious disagreements with the Puritan church.
Louis died on January 25, 1627 from injuries suffered after slipping on ice. The colony held a funeral for its first colonist. Louis was as respected by the Native Americans as he was by the other Frenchmen. He was first buried in the cemetery of the Recollets, but in 1678 his remains inside his cedar coffin were transported to the newly built vault of the Recollets (the Franciscans) with the remains of brother Pacifique Duplessis.
In 1634 Tayac Chitimachen or Kittamaquund converted to Christianity under the guidance of Jesuit Rev. Andrew White. His young daughter Mary, who also had converted and taken a Christian name, married the colonist Giles Brent of Maryland. Soon, the tribe was caught in English religious wars, as the Virginia Protestant trader William Claiborne and his ally Captain Ingalls, invaded Maryland and destroyed St. Mary's City as well as the rival trading post at Kent Island.
Kumari Jayawardena was born in 1931. She credits her family as the source of her early interest in Leftists politics; her father Dr A. P. de Zoysa was a member of the State Council and her mother Eleanor Hutton came from a family of strong feminists, socialists and anti-colonist. Her grandmother, Sarah Bewick, was a suffragette. She was senior Fellow of the Institute of Graduate Studies at University of Colombo, Sri Lanka in 2006.
Chapter six talks about how the Romans went about making war. He claims that their goal for war was to be short and massive. Chapter seven talks about how much land the Romans gave per Colonist. He claims that this would be tough to determine because it depended on the places where they sent the colonists. Chapter 8 discusses the cause why peoples leave their ancestral places and inundate the country of others.
L'Ecuyer, the character, is a struggling gay theatre director trying to stage a production of Hedda Gabler, who gets involved in various misadventures as he tries to find, through any means necessary, the money to finance his vision while a camera crew documents his efforts."Mockumentary reflects Canadian sense of humour". Victoria Times- Colonist, September 4, 2005. The cast also includes Beau Starr, Mark Day, Mary McLaughlin, Kristen Thomson and Tom McCamus.
Rhodotorula glutinis is the type species of the genus Rhodotorula, a basidiomycetous genus of pink yeasts which contains 370 species. Heterogeneity of the genus has made its classification difficult with five varieties having been recognized; however, as of 2011, all are considered to represent a single taxon. The fungus is a common colonist of animals, foods and environmental materials. It can cause opportunistic infections, notably blood infection in the setting of significant underlying disease.
R. glutinis is the second most common disease-causing species of Rhodotorula following R. mucilaginosa. Infections have been observed worldwide, though nearly half of all reported infections have originated in the Asia-Pacific region. It was not until 1985, that species of Rhodotorula had been first reported in human colonization and infection. Its occasional recovery from stool has led to the suggestion that it exists as a periodic, clinically insignificant colonist of the distal gut.
An aerial view of the "Copper Triangle" Samuel Stephens became the first adult colonist to put foot on South Australian soil when he landed at Nepean Bay on 27 July 1836. He was followed by hundreds of other Cornish people over the following five years.John Blackett, History of South Australia, Adelaide, 1911. His brother, John Stephens, was active in promoting the new colony within Britain, publishing his book, The Land of Promise, in 1839.
Both Elizabeth Reef and Middleton Reef have been the site of numerous shipwrecks. According to the National Shipwrecks Database, the ships stranded at Elizabeth Reef include: Britannia, Colonist, Douglas, Elizabeth, Naiad, Packet, Ramsay, Rosetta Joseph, and Tyrian. Britannia is listed for both Elizabeth and Middleton Reefs. British sailor Steve Landles was winched to a Royal Australian Navy Sea Hawk helicopter from the stranded yacht Lamachan on 2 August 2007; the yacht could not be recovered.
The first recorded name of the village was Megyer, which refers to the fact that people from the Megyer tribe (who gave their name to Magyars) settled here after the migration of Hungarians into Pannonia in the early 10th century. Megyer belongs to the oldest strata of Hungarian toponymy. In the second half of the 17th century Megyer was destroyed by the wars with Ottoman Turks. The village was resettled by German colonist from the 1740s onwards.
Resenting his treatment, Weyland retreats from the colony to an isolated homestead on a mountain near the colony. Mary Ann, a colonist with a romantic interest in Weyland, convinces him to allow her to stay with him, and conceives his child. Ultimately, Weyland agrees to assist the colony in its defenses. The colonists are confounded by the ecology of the island, as there does not seem to be a sufficient food source for the creatures to inhabit it.
Also in 1865, Pierre Rost returned from Europe, with a pardon from President Andrew Johnson, and demanded his property back. The Colony existed for an additional year, paying Rost rent, with the last colonist departing in December 1866. Pierre Rost died in 1868 and his wife and son, Emile Rost, continued to live at Destrehan Plantation. Emile Rost sold the plantation in 1910, to the Destrehan Planting and Manufacturing Company, ending family ownership of the estate after 123 years.
Eleazor Holmes Ellis was born on his father's farm in the town of Preble, in Brown County, Wisconsin Territory. Eleazor and his siblings were some of the earliest colonist children born in the territory of Wisconsin. His father, Albert Gallatin Ellis, was the publisher of the Green Bay Intelligencer--the first newspaper published west of Lake Michigan. Albert G. Ellis was also Mayor of Stevens Point, Wisconsin, at the same time that Eleazor was Mayor of Green Bay.
The building was built as a farmhouse for the family of Joseph Denton in 1795. The owners were descendants of Richard Denton, a Presbyterian minister who immigrated in 1630 and a founder of the town, and his son, colonist Daniel Denton. In the 1860s, it was converted into a Georgian-style mansion, with ornamentation. The house ceased being a private residence after World War I, at which point it became a funeral home and then a series of restaurants.
John Wilkinson (November 13, 1758 – 1802) was born in Rhode Island, United States. He was a direct descendant of Lawrence Wilkinson who fled the oppression of Oliver Cromwell in 1652 and settled in America and the son of Roger Wilkinson, an early colonist, who settled in Rhode Island where Roger Williams promoted the concept of freedom of religion. John Wilkinson settled in Troy, New York and seventeen years later moved his family to Skaneateles, New York.
She draws upon her last remaining strength and, in a headlong rush at the Rebecca twins, takes them over the edge of the Pore with her. Several days later, Drake is shown Topsoil as he observes a Colonist who is, in turn, observing Mrs. Burrows. It is clear that he wants to exact his revenge on the Styx for the deaths of Sarah and Cal. The book ends when he dials a phone and waits for an answer.
The formation of a biofilm begins with the attachment of free-floating microorganisms to a surface. The first colonist bacteria of a biofilm may adhere to the surface initially by the weak van der Waals forces and hydrophobic effects. If the colonists are not immediately separated from the surface, they can anchor themselves more permanently using cell adhesion structures such as pili. A unique group of Archaea that inhabit anoxic groundwater have similar structures called hami.
Over 100 people, including the city's serving mayor, protested the publication. The Daily News eventually apologized for publishing the letter, then apologized again later that year for publishing a second letter which was also critical of First Nations. In 2015, Glacier Media sold all its island papers except for the Times Colonist to Black Press. In January 2016, Black Press announced the closing of the Daily News while maintaining its separate newspaper, the Nanaimo Daily Bulletin.
All four walls were laid in Flemish bond, with English bond below the glazed water table. It has a central passage plan and the entrance facade on the west is symmetrical, with a central doorway. Due to a fire in 1915, much of the interior was destroyed but the house is structurally preserved. The house was built on property acquired in 1641 English immigrant colonist Dr. Henry Harry Lee, who added to his property in 1650 and 1653.
Convinced that the colonist meant to kill them, they returned to the column and informed Major John Pitcairn of the British Marines of the incident. Pitcairn and the British column marched on to Lexington where they met and fired on local minutemen on the village green. After this initial engagement, the British troops marched on to Concord. Sutherland was with the British soldiers at the North Bridge in Concord when they confronted around 400 Massachusetts militia and minutemen.
Stilwell was born on March 19, 1883, in Palatka, Florida.Barbara Tuchman, Stilwell and the American Experience in China, 1911–45 (New York, New York: Macmillan Co., 1971), p. 10. His parents were Doctor Benjamin Stilwell and Mary A. Peene. Stilwell was an eighth generation descendant of an English colonist who arrived in America in 1638, whose descendants remained in New York up through the birth of Stilwell's father.Tuchman, Stilwell and the American Experience in China, p. 9.
Walter was born in New Britain, Connecticut, the son of Leverett Camp and Ellen Sophia (Cornwell) Camp. Walter Camp was of English descent. His first immigrant ancestor was the English colonist Nicholas Camp, who came from Nazeing, Essex, England and arrived in colonial New England in 1630, arriving first in Massachusetts and then moving to Connecticut that same year. Walter attended Hopkins Grammar School in New Haven, entered Yale College in 1875, and graduated in 1880.
William Sandford (1637-1691) was a colonist, planter, government official and militiaman. Born in an English enclave in The Free and Hanseatic City of Hamburg, he also lived in Surinam, Barbados and East Jersey. In partnership with his uncle, Nathaniel Kingsland of Barbados, he obtained the initial land grant for New Barbadoes, New Jersey and he and his family were the first European settlers there. He held various civil offices and was involved in several militia engagements.
Sebastian de Aparicio y del Pardo (20 January 1502 – 25 February 1600) was a Spanish colonist in Mexico shortly after its conquest by Spain, who after a lifetime as a rancher and road builder entered the Order of Friars Minor as a lay brother. He spent the next 26 years of his long life as a beggar for the Order and died with a great reputation for holiness. He has been beatified by the Catholic Church.
The flow of Cape Verdean emigrants to Dakar continued until the 1950s. When Senegal achieved independence in 1960, some Cape Verdeans followed their French colonist employers to France, augmenting the numbers of Cape Verdeans already found in France in cities such as Paris, Versailles, and Nice. However, many others chose to remain in Senegal. There are roughly 300 people among the Cape Verdean community in Senegal who have migrated back to the land of their ancestors.
After becoming a chief, White Eyes married Rachel Doddridge (d. 1788), a young English colonist who had been taken captive as a 5-year-old child during a Lenape raid and adopted into the Lenape people, becoming fully assimilated. They had at least one son, named George Morgan White Eyes. Rachel had been living with her father Philip Doddridge and family at a farm on the shores of Chartier's Creek near Statler's Fort (Washington County, Pennsylvania).
This consisted of the curia proper and possibly a records office. The biggest change is seen around 173 BC in what is considered the coming of the second wave of colonist, which called for a larger Curia. The Curia was then expanded into a larger building with three halls. Scholars speculate that these three halls are at the northern end a tabularium, with offices for aediles and other magistrates on the south side, and the Curia in the middle.
The production was initiated by baron Kotman who informed Vienna that the hemp succeeds well on the territory of the new colonist settlements. He gathered the hemp producers, he provided them with work means and obliged to purchase from them 5000 cubits of fabric annually. The production got more massive and Odžaci became one of the biggest centers for hemp production in Europe. In 1779 hemp fair was held for the first time and eventually became more significant.
During this time Zambia had not let many anthropologists into the country because of perceived colonist attitudes. This particular fieldwork aided Leacock in her research of the decolonization efforts in primary school education. One of Leacock's most fruitful contributions to the field of anthropology was her essay entitled "Interpreting the Origins of Gender Inequality: Conceptual and Historical Problems" (1983), in which she discussed gender inequalities. Leacock's theories mainly concentrated on the intersectionality of race, class, gender, sexuality, and religion.
Like M.U.L.E., the game is about four colonists (players) building up an economy on the planet Irata (Atari spelled backwards). The objective is to become the richest colonist within twelve game turns, while also attempting to improve the overall health of the colony. In contrast to M.U.L.E., the setting is transferred to a sub-oceanic world. The most notable change in game play is the addition of a fifth choice of how to outfit the labour element.
In the English-speaking colonies, it was known variously as cassina, yaupon tea, Indian tea, Carolina tea, and Appalachian tea. It was commonly believed to be and used as a diuretic. By the late 1700s, yaupon tea was described as being more commonly used in North Carolina at breakfast than tea made with Camellia sinensis. In addition to using it on their own, Spanish and British colonist often drank black drink when engaging in discussions and treaties with Natives.
The auction was described by local Mickey Rindin to Vince Guerrieri in The New Colonist: > First, bids were taken on each individual horse. Then, when each individual > horse had a sale price, bids were taken for the whole carousel. The opening > bid was the sum of the price for all the horses plus ten percent, which came > to $385,000. A buyer was found, and a great cry went up from the crowd > because the horses would stay together.
Effectors are central to the pathogenic or symbiotic potential of microbes and microscopic plant-colonizing animals such as nematodes. Effectors typically are proteins that are delivered outside the microbe and into the host cell. These colonist-derived effectors manipulate the host's cell physiology and development. As such, effectors offer examples of co-evolution (example: a fungal protein that functions outside of the fungus but inside of plant cells has evolved to take on plant-specific functions).
Ake Lianga (born 1975 on Guadalcanal) is a Solomon Islands screen printer and painter, who has "gained recognition for paintings and murals throughout Oceania"."Alcheringa show bridges Pacific", Times Colonist, November 6, 2010 After schooling, Lianga became self-employed as a sign painter and mural artist. In 1995, he won the South Pacific Contemporary Art Competition. In 1996, he won the Commonwealth Arts and Crafts award for painting, and began studying at North Island College in Canada.
Goodwin dug 420 test pits, uncovering artifacts including a King Charles II farthing coin, and French and English gun flints. An unearthed brick foundation proved to be the remains of the tavern owned by colonist James Phillips. Another prominent landholder in Old Baltimore was William Osbourne, who operated the ferry across the Bush River. In his article "Migrations of Baltimore Town", Reverend George Armistead Leakin related a letter he had received from Dr. George I. Hays.
Samuel Dennison (12 December 1869 - 27 March 1953) was an Australian politician. He represented the South Australian House of Assembly multi-member seat of Wooroora from 1930 to 1938 for the Country Party and its successor the Liberal and Country League.Samuel Dennison: SA Parliament Dennison was born at Auburn, South Australia, the son of early colonist Robert Dennison. He went into farming, like his father, and eventually took over his father's property, farming wheat, sheep and wool.
It was in use from approximately 1638 until 1789 at which point the cemetery was abandoned. It was reclaimed in 1887 by the Duxbury Rural Society, generating a widespread interest in locating the resting place of Duxbury's most famous colonist, Myles Standish. After two exhumations in 1889 and 1891, it was generally agreed that Standish's remains had been located and a memorial was built over his gravesite.Browne, Patrick T.J. and Forgit, Norman R. Duxbury...Past and Present.
Constructed in 1839, Stannix Park House is a rare and important colonial vernacular farm house of the Hawkesbury River area. The combination of farm house and carriage/cart house within a single building is most unusual and is believed to be unique in the area. It is reminiscent of its early English derivation. The house was built by an early colonist of some note and has been owned by the descendants of some of the earliest Australian families.
Hundreds of other Cherokee committed suicide due to their losses and disfigurement from the disease. After the Anglo-Cherokee War, bitterness remained between the two groups. In 1765, Henry Timberlake took three of the former Cherokee adversaries to London to help cement the newly declared friendship. American colonist Henry Timberlake described the Cherokee people as he saw them in 1761: From 1753 to 1755, battles broke out between the Cherokee and Muscogee over disputed hunting grounds in North Georgia.
Wider use of TEK by scholars has begun to lend credence to it. Kimmerer's efforts are motivated in part by her family history. Her grandfather was a member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation, and received colonist schooling at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Carlisle, Pennsylvania. The school, similar to Canadian residential schools, set out to "civilize" Native children, See Carlisle Indian Industrial School Digital Resource Center forbidding residents from speaking their language, and effectively erasing their Native culture.
Over time Gavaghan's actions during the Mau Mau Uprising became subject to a significant amount of writing, and observers frequently singled him out as an important figure in the event and used him as a representation of a brutal colonist. In 1999 he published a memoir on his service in the colonial administration in Kenya, entitled Of Lions and Dung Beetles. In his later life he became afflicted by Alzheimer's disease. He died on 10 August 2011.
Rankin was born in Belleville, Ontario, the only male of five children, to Eleanore, a school teacher, and McKinley Rankin, a teacher and insurance agent."Murray Rankin" . Victoria Times-Colonist, November 26, 2012. He went on to university on scholarships, grants and loans, completing his undergrad at Queen's University and the Université de Montréal and law degrees from the University of Toronto and Harvard University where he graduated summa cum laude with a master's degree in law.
At the time of the American Revolutionary War, Pierre Drouillard was employed by the British Indian Department as a trader and interpreter of the Huron language, of the Iroquoian language family. (Note: Other accounts say he was born in 1775.). Pierre Drouillard was commissioned as a captain by the British army. Drouillard is credited with saving the life of colonist and explorer Simon Kenton, held as a prisoner of the Shawnee at Sandusky, Ohio, in 1778.
Around 1881, Alwyn Maude, a Rugby colonist, established a post office in the community, and named it for his home village of Armathwaite in England.Wanda Sewell Hatfield, "Armathwaite, Mount Helen, Shirley, and Honey Creek Communities," History of Fentress County, Tennessee (Fentress County Historical Society, 1987), p. 19. Oil drilling and logging activities took place in the area during the late 19th and early 20th centuries.Claudette Stager, "," National Register of Historic Places inventory form, December 1990, p. E-9.
The earliest plan of the city was designed by Dutch colonist, Cornelis Jansz. Plockhoy, the designer of this new settlement, laid a 25-30m wide main street (on today's Minquan Rd Sec. 2) across the settlement and radial roads than ran deep into agricultural developments . The Han Chinese settlement “Heliaogang Jie” (today's Zhongyi Rd) later crossed the main street of Provintia and formed the so-called Shizi Dajie (十字大街) or The Great Cross Street.
Tanzania is thought to have the largest population of albinos in Africa. Albinos are especially persecuted in Shinyanga and Mwanza, where witch doctors have promoted a belief in the potential magical and superstitious properties of albinos' body parts. There are further issues which arise when there is lack of education about albinism. Fathers often suspect the mother of the albino child of infidelity with a white man or that the child is the ghost of a European colonist.
According to a local legend, indigenous people in the area found the skeleton of a Caucasian man near the waterfalls, thus giving the river its current name; the river was given its name because "an Englishman was drowned while attempting to cross."Victoria Colonist, December 1949, Islander, p. 10 Spanish mapmakers originally named it the "Rio de Grullas," presumably because of the large number of great blue herons living at its estuary (grulla being Spanish for "crane").
He wrote that he left a tin of trinkets on the island. From Jan Mayen, the Foam sailed to northern Norway, stopping at Hammerfest, before sailing for Spitzbergen. La Reine Hortense which afforded Dufferin assistance William Wilson - Valet, Gardener, Cape Colonist Sigurdr, son of Jonas an Icelander The schooner yacht "Foam" With its irreverent style, lively pace, and witty commentary, the book became extremely successful. It can be regarded as the prototype of the comic travelogue.
On June 29, 1864, a Grand Trunk train carrying between 354 and 475 passengers, many of them German and Polish immigrants, was travelling from Quebec City to Montreal. The passengers had arrived in a ship from Hamburg, Germany, the previous day. Specialized immigration cars, Colonist cars, had not yet been developed for North American immigration, so the passengers were crammed into nine crudely converted box cars and one old passenger car. At around 1:20 a.m.
Edugyan lives in Victoria, British Columbia, and is married to novelist and poet Steven Price, whom she met when they were both students at the University of Victoria. Their first child was born in August 2011,Marsha Lederman, "Esi Edugyan: A new baby, and an armful of literary-award nominations", The Globe and Mail, October 7, 2011. their second at the end of 2014.Adrian Chamberlain, "Victoria writer Steven Price scores international book deal", Times Colonist, November 13, 2014.
Under hypnosis, Scully recalls the Rebels burning her fellow abductees, as well as a Colonist spacecraft killing the Rebels and abducting Cassandra. During a meeting with Walter Skinner, Mulder continues to insist that the events have been orchestrated by the military and not by aliens. Meanwhile, the Russian vaccine seems to have no effect on Marita. The First Elder tells the Well-Manicured Man that they have already decided to turn the Rebel over to the Colonists.
Between 1897 and 1903, while continuing her studio portraiture, Maynard was the official photographer of the Victoria Police Department, producing mug shots as required. In 1907 her husband Richard died, and in 1912 she retired, selling her photographic equipment to a local Chinese photographer. She summarized her achievement by stating that "I think I can say with confidence that we photographed everyone in the town at one time or another."Victoria Daily Colonist, September 29, 1912.
MORTON JUMPED, BALLOON STRUCK; The San Bernardino Sun vol.24 #15, August 29, 1905 Retrieved October 29, 2017 Because of his various injuries Morton had become incapacitated by October and was unable to work putting him and his wife in poverty. His wife sought to go out and work which angered Morton and he is reported to have engaged in spousal abuse over his wife working against his wishes.RIALTO COLONIST REAPS A GOLDEN HARVEST Los Angeles Herald, Vol.
For example, Count Zinzendorf, a missionary guided by Conrad Weiser with the permission of Oneida chief Shikellamy, came to Otstonwakin in 1742. Madame Montour is believed to have been of Algonkin-French ancestry, born in Quebec. In one account, she told a colonist in the 1740s that she had been taken captive in an Iroquois raid and adopted into an Iroquois family. (Her given name may have been Catherine, Elisabeth/Isabelle, or Madeleine.)Hirsch, Alison Duncan.
Ceremony of Secotan warriors in North Carolina. Watercolour painted by English colonist John White in 1585. Manteo at the Roanoke Colony Dr. M. T. Pope (after whom the Pope House Museum was named), a prominent citizen of Raleigh. The North Carolina Museum of History, Raleigh Woodland-culture Native Americans were in the area around 1000 BCE; starting around 750 CE, Mississippian-culture Indians created larger political units with stronger leadership and more stable, longer-term settlements.
Empress of Australia also rescued many survivors.Anne Park Shannon, "Our History: Empress a witness to disaster" in Times Colonist, 8 March 2015, at timescolonist.com, accessed 10 May 2020 On 5 September, the British press reported that Dongola and all of her crew were safe and had taken aboard many injured and homeless. On 28 December 1923, Commander Griffin was appointed OBE, and the master of the Empress of Australia, already an OBE, was promoted to CBE.
Pocahontas saves the life of John Smith in this chromolithograph, credited to the New England Chromo. Lith. Company around 1870. The scene is idealized; there are no mountains in Tidewater Virginia, for example, and the Powhatans lived in thatched houses rather than tipis. Pocahontas is most famously linked to colonist Captain John Smith, who arrived in Virginia with 100 other settlers in April 1607 where they built a fort on a marshy peninsula on the James River.
The play purports to describe how the colonist Nathaniel Bacon and a volunteer force of Indian fighters temporarily succeeded in overthrowing the government of Sir William Berkeley. Behn portrays Bacon as a heroic figure motivated by honor, and in love with Semernia, an Indian princess. Behn's play has four plots featuring virtually separate casts of characters. One of these is the young and outrageous widow Ranter, who puts on men’s clothes and fights in several battles.
"Serious Defalcations," The British Colonist (Victoria), Jan. 11, 1870, p. 3. The city engineer, Mr. Buckley, was asked to investigate the possibilities. He submitted a report in May 1872 recommending the use of Elk and Beaver Lakes that lay about north of the city. One result of his report was passage of the Victoria Waterworks Act of 1873 by the Provincial Legislature giving the City of Victoria disposal over all water sources within a radius of .
He advanced to second stage of 2007 PGA Tour Q-School ending the 2006 season 29th on the Order of Merit and made 9 of 12 cuts with a pair of top-tens. Risdon also finished T-6th at Diablo Grande California Classic and Times Colonist Open and retained the non-exempt status for 2006 with 93rd finish on 2005 Order of Merit. Risdon won the 2010 ATB Financial Classic. He won the 2016 PGA Assistants' Championship of Canada.
Untitled, Colonist (New Zealand) ("Leon Trotsky, now so prominent in Russian politics, was at one time, it is said, a moving picture actor in America. He appeared in a film entitled "My Official Wife," and his salary is stated to have been just five dollars a day.")Segrave, Kerry. Extras of Early Hollywood: A History of the Crowd, 1913-1945, p. 116 (2013) (citing 1932 Washington Post account of alleged "Trotzky" appearance for $7 per day)(22 February 1937).
Since Spain and Portugal were at war with the Dutch Republic in Europe, the presence of the newcomers alarmed the Iberian colonist. A Spanish- Portuguese force once again tried to conquer Ternate in 1603 but was heavily defeated by the Ternatans and Javanese mercenaries. This in turn prompted a Dutch counter-attack in 1605 under Cornelis Sebastiaansz, that captured the Iberian fort in Tidore after a furious fight. The defeated enemy was allowed to sail for the Philippines.
Victoria Times-Colonist, January 6, 1996. a same-sex couple who were at the centre of the landmark Supreme Court of Canada case Egan v. Canada, which established sexual orientation as a prohibited basis of discrimination under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Egan also had a longer history as an activist, having been Canada's first prominent LGBT rights activist in the 1950s and 1960s before retreating into a quieter domestic life with the more publicity-averse Nesbit.
He is the only colonist known to have died (in contrast to Jamestown which lost half its population that year) although the Abenaki claim that they killed eleven colonists and set fire to the site. Raleigh Gilbert became president of the colony at the age of 25. The colonists completed one major project: the building of a 30-ton ship, a pinnace they named Virginia. It was the first English ocean-going ship built in the Americas.
He received 7,600 votes (15.79%) in 2000, finishing second against Liberal incumbent Mauril Belanger. A newspaper report from the election lists him as 66 years old. He supported a bridge over the Ottawa River east of Kettle Island, and criticized the Liberal government's record on taxes and patronage (Ottawa Citizen, 18 November 2000). Gayowsky later moved to British Columbia, and was campaign manager for Conservative candidate James Lunney in the 2004 election (Victoria Times-Colonist, 17 May 2004).
In addition to the primary members noted above, several other people involved with the Canadian music scene have played with Daddy's Hands. Dan Boeckner of Wolf Parade stated in a 2010 interview that he had played with Daddy's Hands for a time. Brooke Cannon of Atlas Strategic joined the band for their 2002 lineup. The Times Colonist reported in 2013 that members of Hank and Lily had played with Daddy's Hands, although the article did not specify which members.
Benavides was born in Laredo, a descendant of Tomás Sánchez de la Barrera y Garza, the founder of Laredo, as well as the descendant of Captain Francisco Baez De Benavides, born in the Canary Islands and a Portuguese early colonist of Northern Mexico. Benavides was elected Mayor of Laredo in 1856 and then became Webb County Judge in 1859.Jerry Thompson, "BENAVIDES, SANTOS," Handbook of Texas Online , accessed May 28, 2012. Published by the Texas State Historical Association.
The were military settler colonists recruited after the Meiji Restoration to develop and defend Japan's northern frontier in Hokkaidō and Karafuto against foreign nations, particularly Imperial Russia. (The term comes from ancient China, where colonist militias were also employed to defend imperial frontiers.) The first recruits in Japan were ex-samurai whose feudal lords who had opposed the Meiji forces and whose domains were therefore abolished, leaving them without gainful employment. Later recruits included commoners as well as samurai.
The film historian Kelly R. Brown called Her Humble Ministry a slight departure from Lawrence's usual roles, as an arbiter to Johnson. Her Humble Ministry was released on May 18, 1911. The film screened at the Majestic Theatre in Victoria, British Columbia, on July 13 of the same year; and at the nearby Crystal Theatre almost a year later, on June 12. Editors of the British Columbian Daily Colonist described the film as a "touching love story".
Hard apple cider was by far the most common alcoholic beverage available to colonists. This is because apple trees could be grown locally throughout the colonies, unlike grapes and grain which did not grow well at all in New England. Cider was also easier to produce than beer or wine, so it could be made by farmers for their own consumption. Since it was not imported, it was much more affordable to the average colonist than beer or wine.
The colony struggled for five years after its establishment at Jamestown in 1607. Finally, a profitable export crop was identified through the efforts of colonist John Rolfe. After 1612, a sweet form of tobacco became the largest export crop, customarily shipped in large hogsheads. Because the river was a highway of commerce in the 17th and 18th centuries, the early plantations were established on the north and south banks along it, with most having their own wharfs.
When the dynamite fuse goes out, Briggs rushes back to light it, but is attacked by the cannibals. He relights the fuse and sacrifices himself to blow a large gap in the bridge. Kai gets into a heated argument with Mason after learning that he intends to kill a colonist without testing her for disease. Their argument is interrupted when Kai spots a returning, exhausted Sam and runs to him, but Mason promptly knocks her out.
The discord between Favero and Gagnon was later resolved. In July 2011, the two participated in a groundbreaking ceremony for a new church where Favero was pastor, and concelebrated the first Mass there ten months later. The Times Colonist reported in 2013 that Favero "took responsibility for not honouring confidentiality and misrepresenting events". Gagnon served as the AWCB's regional representative on the Permanent Council of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops (CCCB) from 2007 to 2008.
The Narragansett Indians named the island "Aquopimokuk", and Colonist Thomas Gould purchased it from them in 1657. Gould sold the island to Thomas Cranston, and later owners included the Carr family and Joseph Wanton, Jr., who lost the property for having Loyalist sympathies during the American Revolution. British naval leader Captain Wallace constructed a military fort on the island called "Owl's Nest" in 1778 during the American Revolution. In 1803, Caleb Gardner purchased the forfeited island.
Queen Carnivals were held various towns and cities around the country. Lints was advertising another carnival in Whanganui in October 1915 for commencement in December 1915.Advertisements, Wanganui Chronicle, Volume LX, Issue 20488, 30 October 1915, Page 7 He followed this with a similar event in Nelson in 1916.News of the day, Colonist, Volume LVII, Issue 14148, 10 April 1916, Page 4 The focus of these events had now become fund raising for returned soldiers.
Templar were a Canadian alternative rock band from Vancouver, British Columbia,"Musical Templar tantrum". canoe.ca, July 5, 2001. most noted for garnering a Juno Award nomination for Best New Group at the Juno Awards of 2001."Top Juno nominations". Victoria Times-Colonist, January 25, 2001. The band was formed in 1998 by vocalist Murray Yates and guitarist Will C., and fused hard rock and electronica influences in a manner commonly compared by critics to Econoline Crush.
However, since English admiralty courts have never had trial by jury, a colonist charged with breaching the Stamp Act could be more easily convicted by the Crown. Admiralty law was gradually became part of American Law through admiralty cases arising after the adoption of the U.S. Constitution in 1789. Many American lawyers who were prominent in the American Revolution were admiralty and maritime lawyers. Those included are Alexander Hamilton in New York and John Adams in Massachusetts.
Shortly after arriving in this New World, colonist Eleanor Dare, daughter of Governor John White of the colony, gave birth to her daughter Virginia Dare. The governor's granddaughter was believed to be the first English child born in North America. Life on the island was difficult for the colonists. Low on supplies and facing retaliation from the Native Americans they had displaced, the colonists sent Governor White to England in the summer of 1587 for supplies.
The European powers divided West Africa between them at the Berlin Conference of 1884-85. The Ketus had earlier been conquered by Dahomey in 1886, and they went to the French who restored Ketu in 1893 under a protectorate. The flag was hosted. The French colonist asked if there were other communities who wanted to join, which made the Ketus reach out to Ilara during the reign of Regent Alaba Ida the then Alaketu in 1893-1894.
Emerald class corvette A search was mounted by , an from the Pacific Squadron under Captain Harry Francis Hughes-Hallett, for the crews of Marlborough and Dunedin in mid-1891 as a result of a rumour that there were crew members sighted near Good Success Bay, Tierra del Fuego. The story that prompted the search had been originally printed in The Daily Colonist, a Victoria, British Columbia newspaper, on 9 April 1891 and stated that a Brown Brothers sealing schooner Maud S under Captain R E McKiel had, in mid to late January 1891, encountered number of men purporting to be shipwrecked British sailors impressed into service by the Argentine government at the life saving station in Good Success Bay.House Of Commons, The Times (London, England); Wednesday, 29 April 1891; pg 6; Issue 33311The Bearing Sealing Fleet, New York Times, 24 October 1890Halifax to Victoria, The Daily Colonist, 9 April 1891, page 1 The Garnet searched the bay and surrounding area. No sailors were found, nor was there any evidence of their existence.
Perry's mother was also a descendant of Governor Thomas Prence (1599–1673), a co- founder of Eastham, Massachusetts, who was a political leader in both the Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies, and governor of Plymouth; and a descendant of Mayflower passengers, both of whom were signers of the Mayflower Compact, Elder William Brewster (c. 1567–1644), the Pilgrim colonist leader and spiritual elder of the Plymouth Colony, and George Soule (1593–1679), through his grandmother Susannah Barber Perry (1697–1755).
Protection is a Canadian drama film, directed by Bruce Spangler and released in 2000."Film offers inside look at child protection". Victoria Times- Colonist, October 7, 2001. The film stars Jillian Fargey as Betty, a drug addict from Surrey, British Columbia, whose fitness as a mother is being investigated by child protection officer Jane (Nancy Sivak) following suspicions that her boyfriend Joe (William MacDonald) may have been physically and sexually abusive to her children Cindy (Nicole LaPlaca) and Jimmy (Giacomo Baessato).
Many of the new residents or tourists in Florida were responsible for introducing plant species to the area by accident, or deliberately to improve landscaping. Many animals have been introduced similarly, and have either escaped or been released to proliferate on their own. Several terms are used to identify non-native species: exotic, invader, immigrant, colonist, introduced, nonindigenous, and naturalized. "Naturalized" usually refers to species that have adapted to a region over a long period of time,Simberloff, et al, p.
In January 1542, they passed Iguazú Falls and on March 11, 1542, they reached Asunción, where they met Domingo Martínez de Irala. Cabeza de Vaca clashed with the colonists at Asunción, calling the village a "Moorish paradise," as each colonist had taken multiple indigenous women as wives. Soon, Cabeza de Vaca began to prepare an expedition to the lands of the White King. First, he sent Irala up the Paraguay River to see if it led to the Sierra de la Plata.
Joseph Morton (died September 1721) was an early colonist and governor of the Province of Carolina. Although he was not one of Carolina's Lords Proprietors, Morton was influential in the recruitment of religious dissenters to migrate to the new colony. In 1680 he led a group of dissenters to what is now South Carolina, settling Edisto Island. In 1682 he was appointed governor of the colony by the proprietors, but due to disagreements with the proprietors was replaced in 1684.
Highway of Tears debuted at the Human Rights Watch Film Festival in spring 2014, with the Toronto International Film Festival calling it a "hard-hitting documentary". Neil Godbout, writing for the Times Colonist, calls it "a beautiful and tragic film, showcasing strength and perseverance, as well as grief and loss". The film won the Best Documentary award at the Malibu Film Festival in December 2014. It received another award for best documentary from the Women in Film + Television Festival in Vancouver.
Over the next days the pilot steamer Captain Cook hauled away the mainmast and another charge of gun-cotton was used to blow the foremast out of the submerged hull. The mast and topsail yards sank, and they sent a diver down to clear it so that it might be towed away. The hull of the Colonist was well down in the mud. The wreck lay in 20m of water on a silty bottom and was found on 13 May 2013.
They left the Colonist approximately 9 am the following morning with the six remaining crew of the vessel who had been on board the wreck for 40 days. During their stay a whaler had been seen but made no attempt to rescue them latter followed by a Brig which had stopped and lowered a boat but had been unable to find the entrance to the lagoon and sailed around the reef until the Thetis was seen when it then sailed away.
By 1879 he had been appointed sub-lieutenant of the Queensland Government schooner Pearl. In May 1884 Weaver was sentenced to 9 months imprisonment for "obtained goods to the value of £6 15s from W. Royle by means of a valueless cheque". Prior to the Colonist leaving, Sydney Weaver had endeavoured to induce a friend of his to visit an island with him. Weaver related an extraordinary tale of hidden wealth on the island which was known only to him.
He became editor and part owner, with William Nation, of the Colonist in Nelson. His first editorial appeared on 31 March 1863, the day after he arrived on the Electra from London. He became noted for the "stinging lash of his invective and sarcasm". In 1873 Luckie moved to Auckland to become editor of the Daily Southern Cross, and from 1 January 1877 was associated with William Berry in the editorship of The New Zealand Herald after the two newspapers merged.
Graeme Hamilton, "Charest's bumpy ride to the top", Times-Colonist, Victoria, B.C.: April 20, 2003, pg. D.1.Fro. He was appointed Minister of State for Fitness and Amateur Sport in 1988, but had to resign from cabinet in 1990 after improperly speaking to a judge about a case regarding the Canadian Track and Field Association."Political scandal: a chronology", The Vancouver Sun, September 24, 1993, pg. A.6. He returned to cabinet as Minister of the Environment in 1991.
12 A covered and heated staircase led from the station up to Barrington Street's sidewalks and streetcars. The ocean liner and immigration terminal at Pier 2 was only a few blocks away making for a convenient transfer to trains at the North Street Station for ocean liner travellers. Ships with large numbers of immigrants were served by special immigrant passenger trains of Colonist cars ran directly into the wharf side sheds on Pier 2, co-ordinated by the North Street Station.
A letter of January 24, 1623 from colonist John Harrison to his brother, Richard Harrison, states that Captain Powell, and others, were dead.Coldham, Peter Wilson. The complete book of emigrants, 1607-1660: a comprehensive listing compiled from English Public Records of those who took ship to the Americas for political, religious, and economic reasons; of those who were deported for vagrancy, roguery, or non-conformity; and of those who were sold to labour in the new colonies. Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., 1987. .
He served as a justice of the court of York County in 1646 and was elected to the House of Burgesses in 1656. He married Marah Adkins Fulgate. (Lee's descendants spelled the name of the property as "Kiskiak.") Marah's father was the minister who officiated at the 17th-century marriage of Pocahontas, the Powhatan's daughter, and English colonist John Rolfe. While not definitive, more current genealogical review suggests that Dr. Henry Lee (1597–1657) (Thomas Leigh3, Thomas2, Humphrey1), and Col.
Several British soldiers disembarked to lay siege on the village, burning the house, gristmill and sawmill of Thomas Borden, and taking his aged father, Richard, prisoner, burning his house as well. The prisoner was eventually released after several days, and the British retreated from Freetown altogether. The Freetown minutemen were aided by a colonist militia from the Tiverton outpost led by Captain Joseph Durfee, a war veteran recently returned from a battle at White Plains and son of Thomas Durfee Esq. of Freetown.
Compton Island was named about 1866 by Captain Pender for Pym Nevin Compton of Hampshire. From a Quaker family, she came to Victoria in the employ of the Hudson's Bay Company, working as a clerk. He was serving as a trading clerk on the Labouchere when he was taken captive by natives in Alaska in August 1862.Victoria Colonist, August 23, 1862 He was stationed at Port Simpson (Lax Kw'alaams today) and at Fort Rupert where he was in charge.
Editorial, Colonist, Volume XLV, Issue 10398, 2 May 1902, Page 2 He stood unsuccessfully again in 1904.Mayoral elections, Wanganui Chronicle, Volume XXXXVII, Issue 12199, 28 April 1904, Page 5 Moffatt did not stand for the Borough Council in 1905. In 1906 Moffatt was a successful candidate for the Motueka Harbour Board.Motueka Harbour Board, Nelson Evening Mail, Volume XLI, Issue 30, 7 February 1906, Page 2 In 1907 he stood again for Council and was tied in 6th place with Mr Grooby.
The eleven ships eventually transported about 700 colonists to the New World,. Second publication of the original text of John Winthrop's journal. In 1632 and 1636 White was corresponding with John Winthrop (who urged White to visit the colony) about cod-lines and hooks to be sent, as well as flax of a suitable growth for Rhode Island. From 1630 to 1640 ships carried about 10,000 English colonist to the New World in what has been called the Great Migration.
The 1988 World Junior Curling Championships were held from March 13 to 19 in Füssen, West Germany for the men's competition and from March 19Victoria Times Colonist, 20 Mar 1988, pg M11, "B.C. quartet overcomes early jitters" to 25 in Chamonix, France for the women's competition. While it was the 14th junior men's competition, this was the inaugural year for the junior women's competition. It has also been the only year that the men's and women's competitions were held separately.
Pam Lambert of The Wall Street Journal wrote "vocals, driven ahead by the force of the bass guitar, also carry the..Motowny Touch." Cashbox stated "songs like 'Sweet Sassy Lady' and 'Touch' make their point with popping bass lines and electronic keyboard riffs very much in vogue with today's music." Prentis Rogers of The Atlanta Journal-Constitution said the song has a "mellow, upbeat nature." Paul Bennett of the Times Colonist wrote "The group's specialty of shifting harmonies comes forward especially on Touch".
The camp under siege The Boers had won a major battle, and Captain Smith had lost many of his men. Smith realised he needed to urgently request reinforcements from the Cape Colony, which was six hundred kilometers of untamed wilderness away. An English trader known as Dick King and colonist volunteered to alert the colony by riding on horseback to Grahamstown. Slipping through the Boers under the cover of night, King and his native assistant escaped and began their seemingly impossible mission.
West Cajoot departed San Francisco on her first journey under a new management company on December 29, 1926. After stopping off in Los Angeles two days later, she proceeded on her way with a load of general cargo, and almost 2,000,000 feet of timber to New Zealand and Australia. She arrived at Auckland on January 27, 1927,Daily Colonist, January 29, 1927, p.17 and from there proceeded to Wellington (February 5), Melbourne (February 15), Sydney (February 21), Brisbane (February 28).
Rebecca Jorden (Carrie Henn), nicknamed "Newt", is the only surviving colonist of LV-426. She is living in the air ducts of the Hadley's Hope compound when she is discovered by the Colonial Marines' party. Although she is in a state of shock, Newt bonds with the party—particularly with Ripley, whom she sees as a mother figure. During the survivors' escape from LV-426, Newt is abducted by the Aliens, but Ripley infiltrates the hive and rescues her from the Alien Queen.
Consequently, the Rebels forced them out in 1912. They were given an order to leave their homes and return to the United States on July 28. Within two days, almost all of the colonist had fled, with the hope that this would be a temporary exile. But when some of the residents returned in the autumn of 1912 and later in 1915, they discovered that the warring factions had burned most of the settlers' property and little could be salvaged from the rubble.
Statue of Miles Morgan by Jonathan Scott Hartley Miles Morgan (1616 – 28 May 1699) was a Welsh colonist of America, a pioneer settler of what was to become Springfield, Massachusetts. Being one of the few settlers whose homesteads were successfully defended during the Attack on Springfield, Morgan was lauded as a hero of King Philip's War in 1675 for providing shelter and successfully contacting troops in Hadley. Today, a statue of Miles Morgan stands in the city's Court Square in Metro Center.
1901 arr. Trussell) (Some publications spell Speranizo rather than Speranza) "Papers Past" "Nelson Garrison Band" Colonist, Nelson, 14 May 1902"Papers Past" "Wanganui Garrison Band at Caledonia Sports" Wanganui Chronicle, Whanganui, 15 January 1904 La Traviata (Selection) (Verdi arr. Trussell) 1906 Test Piece Waihi Band Contest. "Papers Past" "Test piece Waihi Band Contest C. Trussell Ajudicator" The New Zealand Herald, Auckland, 10 November 1906 Re-arranged to suit Lismore Contest Test piece (sometime between 1907 and 1914) Luisa Miller (Selection) (by Verdi arr.
Roger Ludlow (1590–1664) was an English lawyer, magistrate, military officer, and colonist. He was active in the founding of the Colony of Connecticut, and helped draft laws for it and the nearby Massachusetts Bay Colony. Under his and John Mason's direction, Boston's first fortification, later known as Castle William and then Fort Independence was built on Castle Island in Boston harbor. Frequently at odds with his peers, he eventually also founded Fairfield and Norwalk before leaving New England entirely.
John White, father of the colonist Eleanor Dare and grandfather to Virginia Dare, the first English child born in the New World, left the colony to return to England for supplies. He expected to return to Roanoke Island within three months. By this time, England itself was under threat of a massive Spanish invasion, and all ships were confiscated for use in defending the English Channel. White's return to Roanoke Island was delayed until 1590, by which time all the colonists had disappeared.
He retired from the U.S. Coast Guard on July 1, 1977. In 2008, while reporting on the 100th anniversary celebration of the founding of Canada's Bamfield Station, the Victoria Times Colonist characterized McAdams as a "legendary figure in the U.S. Coast Guard", who "stole the show at the historic symposium with his on-the-job tales." McAdams' life-saving efforts were so dramatic that he appeared as a guest on several television shows, and was profiled in Life and National Geographic.
The original publication by the Pennsylvania Gazette on May 9, 1754, is the earliest known pictorial representation of colonial union produced by an American colonist in Colonial America. It is a woodcut showing a snake cut into eighths, with each segment labeled with the initials of one of the American colonies or regions. New England was represented as one segment, rather than the four colonies it was at that time. Delaware was not listed separately as it was part of Pennsylvania.
John Williams was the only colonist with any form of rudimentary medical skill. Once they reached the valley of the Chubut River, their first settlement was a small fortress on the site which later became the town of Rawson, now the capital of Chubut province. This was referred to as Yr Hen Amddiffynfa (The Old Fortress). The first houses, constructed from earth, were washed away by a flash flood in 1865, and new houses of superior quality were built to replace them.
Jean-Pierre Pury (1675 - 1736) was an explorer, geographer and colonist from the Principality of Neuchâtel, a Prussian principality in modern-day Switzerland. He served as mayor of Lignières and worked as a wine merchant before losing his wealth to a fire. He then worked as a corporal for the Dutch East India Company, which inspired him to found his own colony. After years of campaigning, he was granted permission by the British Crown to establish a settlement in the Province of Carolina.
He also undertook virtually no promotional efforts for his 2009 album The Place Where We Lived."Hayden returns after four-year absence from recording, performing". Victoria Times-Colonist, January 28, 2013. In 2010, an erroneous rumour that he had died was propagated in several online venues, including Wikipedia; The Globe and Mail music critic Robert Everett-Green has speculated that the rumour may have been caused by confusion with Canadian R&B; singer Haydain Neale, who died in November 2009.
During 1621 fifty-seven unmarried women sailed to Virginia under the auspices of the Virginia Company, who paid for their transport and provided them with a small bundle of clothing and other goods to take with them. A colonist who married one of the women would be responsible for repaying the Virginia Company for his wife's transport and provisions. The women traveled on three ships, The Marmaduke, The Warwick, and The Tyger. Many of the women were not "maids" but widows.
Dissemination of the organism to the central nervous system has been observed in some cases. This species is also known as a non-invasive colonist of the external ear and airways of patients with poor lung or sinus clearance, and the first documented case of human pseudallescheriasis involved the ear canal. It has also been implicated in infection of joints following traumatic injury, and these infections can progress to osteomyelitis. Infections of the skin and cornea have also been reported.
He was born on November 10, 1810 in Bennington, Vermont, and was a direct descendant of Kenelm Winslow, brother of Edward Winslow, a Mayflower colonist and a governor of Plymouth Colony. John Winslow worked as a clerk in a commission house until he was 21. In 1831, he joined the New Jersey Iron Company as a manager in the Boston office. In 1933 (1833?), he started his own business, making pig iron in Bergen and Sussex counties in New Jersey.
The Oran Park property was originally part of a 2000-acre land grant, awarded by Governor Lachlan Macquarie to William Douglas Campbell in 1815. Campbell was a prominent colonist and member of the British merchant navy who named the property Harrington Park and used that land, on which Oran Park now resides, as open cleared space for pastoral cultivation and livestock grazing. Over two centuries, Oran Park has been under the ownership of a number of different people and companies.
The author of The Ordering of Bees: Or, The True History of Managing Them is thought to have been a clergyman, and possibly the nephew of English explorer Capt. Christopher Levett, Christopher Levett, of York, The Pioneer colonist in Casco Bay, James Phinney Baxter, The Gorges Society, Portland, 1893 one of the earliest explorers of New England.Some beekeeping authorities believe that Levett wrote the book about 1600, although it wasn't actually published until 1634. Whoever Levett was, he clearly had an advanced education.
Early examples were introduced by the Central Pacific Railroad in 1879. John H. White, The American Railroad Passenger Car, Part 2, JHU Press (1985), p. 471-472 By 1885 the idea was matched by other western railway such as the Santa Fe, the Union Pacific, the Northern Pacific, the Great Northern Railway and the Canadian Pacific Railway. The fleet of colonist cars at Canadian Pacific grew to include over a thousand cars, providing spartan sleeping accommodation to immigrants to Western Canada.
Fedor Kelling, who had previously represented the electorate, intended to contest the 1861 election for Suburbs of Nelson. At a meeting with electors in Stoke, it was decided that there is no real difference in political opinion between Kelling and Wemyss, the other contender for the position. Kelling thus stepped back from the contest. Wemyss, who was away from the district for the month during the election campaign, had placed a long advertisement in The Colonist outlining his political opinion.
Luke Vincent Lockwood. Luke Vincent Lockwood was born February 1, 1872 in Brooklyn, New York, the son of Luke A. Lockwood and his wife, Mary Louise Lyon, daughter of Captain William Lyon and Catherine Mead. Lockwood was the fifth great-Grandson of the English immigrant and Greenwich colonist, Robert Lockwood and his wife, Susan Norman, daughter of Captain Richard Norman. Lockwood was a lawyer and an author in the field of furniture design of the Federal Period in United States.
She goes to America and becomes a power over a tribe of Indians. One of her aides is her own brother, who had been adopted by a colonist. Brother and sister are unaware of the relationship until the close of the story. The gallant fight which the Americans under General Washington wage against the English troops and the Indians under Catherine's lead forms a thrilling phase of the story and the chief incidents with which every American is familiar are dramatically set forth.
49-51 Bosworth Street is an intact example of the more substantial town buildings erected in Richmond during the prosperous 1830s. It represents the style of building construction more substantial than the crude dwellings initially erected in the town. It has a strong association with a local entrepreneur, Isaac Cornwell, who was representative of the moderately successful second generation, native born colonist. It demonstrates the characteristic style of town buildings, construction techniques and building materials of house building in the 1830s-1840s.
Nicholas Brown Jr. was the son of Rhoda Jenckes (1741–1783) and Nicholas Brown Sr. (1729–1791), a merchant and co-founder of Brown University (which was then called College of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations). He was the nephew of John Brown (1736–1803) and Moses Brown (1738–1836) and a descendant of the English colonist and Baptist minister Chad Brown (c. 1600–1650), who co-founded Providence. His maternal grandfather was Daniel Jenckes (1701–1774), a judge from a prominent family.
On May 19, 1836, a huge war party of Comanche, Kiowa, Wichita, and Delaware attacked the colonist outpost of Fort Parker. Completed in March 1834, it had been regarded by the colonists as a strong-point, sufficient to protect them from any Native Americans not observing the peace treaties. Elder John Parker had negotiated with local Indians. Unfortunately for the immigrants, because these Native Americans were subject nations to the Comanche, the tribe did not feel bound to observe the peace.
Many, but not all, of her Kyle Stone books were hybrids of erotica and science fiction. During this era, she also co-edited several anthologies of gay male erotica by other writers under her own name, becoming embroiled in the ongoing Canada Customs controversy around shipments to LGBT bookstores such as Glad Day and Little Sister's when her anthology Bizarre Dreams was confiscated by customs agents despite being a Canadian book."Customs seize Canadian book". Victoria Times-Colonist, July 23, 1994.
In 1747, Livingston wrote and published a long pastoral poem entitled, "Philosophic Solitude, or the Choice of a Rural Life". One of the first successful original poems written by an American colonist, it was anthologized numerous times into the 19th century. In 1754, Livingston also played a key role in founding the New York Society Library, which is still in existence over a quarter of a millennium later. The township of Livingston, New Jersey was given its name in his honor,About Livingston .
Anarchy Online is a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) published and developed by Norwegian video game development company Funcom. Released in the summer of 2001, the game was the first in the genre to include a science-fiction setting, dynamic quests, instancing, free trials, and in- game advertising. The game's ongoing storyline revolves around the fictional desert planet "Rubi-Ka", the source of a valuable mineral known as "Notum". Players assume the role of a new colonist to Rubi-Ka.
Her ancestor Thomas Pierce Jr., an early New England colonist, was also an ancestor of Franklin Pierce, 14th president of the United States. She was a fourth cousin, four times removed, of Franklin Pierce and Henry Wadsworth Longfellow. Pierce and her three siblings were raised in a house on Onondaga Street in Rye. She attended Milton Public School from 1931 to 1937, Rye Country Day School until 1940 and later the boarding school Ashley Hall in Charleston, South Carolina, from 1940 to 1943.
The gardens, which now cover an area of about , were set aside on 8 June 1729 for colonist P. Barmont 'barmond', who sold it on 3 January 1735 to Claude N. de Maupin, an overseer in the royal French East India Company. Subsequently, there were several other owners, and by 1805, the land had increased to about . By 1868, the gardens themselves occupied , with later additions to a total of . Only of garden remain, the rest being an experimental station.
The Catholic parish of St. Hubert was established shortly after the arrival of most of the aristocrats. It in fact owes its origin, and its subsequent development as a French-speaking Catholic community, to two of these aristocrats. According to The Colonist, by 1889 de Roffignac and the Baron van Brabant "conceived the idea of establishing a French colony." Joe Sage informed the author that a meeting was held on the spot of the first church, near the stone cairn mentioned above.
The Colonist indicates: "During the pulling season this year (at Bellevue, 1890) assistance was so scarce that a number of Indians were employed and paid in proportion to the work performed." With a large community of French-speaking Catholics settled in the district, the nobles could count on a lingually uniform and readily available pool of labourers to man their various enterprises. The community of new immigrants moreover would provide a market for the products produced in 'the Counts' factories.
Early in 1886 Vosper immigrated to Australia, arriving in Maryborough, Queensland in the middle of the year. He worked as a timber miller, drover and miner, before taking a job as a journalist for the Eidsvold Reporter. He later became mining correspondent for Maryborough Chronicle and Colonist, before becoming sub-editor for the Northern Miner in Charters Towers. According to Jaggard (1979), Vosper was heavily influenced by the political opinions and journalistic style of the Northern Miner's owner and editor, Thadeus O'Kane.
Irish sources state that around 800 English soldiers were killed, though the English put their losses at 360 dead.Brooks, Battlefields of Britain & Ireland, pg 332 Among those killed was Peter Carew, cousin of his namesake colonist who had made claims to, and won, large tracts of land in southern Ireland. The remainder of the English force retreated to lowland Wicklow and from there to Dublin. However, the following year, when offered terms, most of the Irish soldiers, including O'Byrne, came in and surrendered.
The early Colonist cleared the virgin forests and carved farms out the land—and these are the same working farms that you see today.Municipal Histories 974.873-R 12 at Huntingdon Co. Historical Society, PA 'In the early 1800s individuals of the area began mining Tussey Mountain for ore. These men operated on a small scale, but later larger companies started operations. One of these was the Grove Brothers of Danville, Montour Co., PA. They hauled ore to Cambria Iron Ore Works at Johnstown.
Edward Hopkins (1600 – March 1657) was an English colonist and politician and Governor of the Connecticut Colony. Active on both sides of the Atlantic, he was a founder of the New Haven and Connecticut colonies, serving seven one- year terms as governor of Connecticut. He returned to England in the 1650s, where he was politically active in the administration of Oliver Cromwell. He remained in England despite being elected governor of Connecticut in 1655, and died in London in 1657.
Many area residents fought in the American Revolution, and small engagements were fought near Kingston at Bear Bluff and at Black Lake. Francis Marion, who was known as the "Swamp Fox", had an encampment near Kingston just across the Waccamaw River. The areas of Kingston and Charles Town, S.C. were communities with a higher population of Tories than many other Colonial American towns during the revolutionary war era. A Tory was a colonist who supported the government during that period.
It is 1667 in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, and an uneasy truce exists between local Puritans and their neighbors, the Algonquian. Chief Metacomet succeeds his father Massasoit as head of the latter just as a new colonist, Hester Prynne arrives overseas from England. As Hester waits for her husband—who is due to follow shortly after—she falls for a young minister, Arthur Dimmesdale. When it emerges that Roger Prynne has likely been killed by Native Americans, they become inseparable lovers.
The Romans could never feel altogether safe in the Hunsrück in what they called Germania Superior. Beginning in the mid 4th century AD, Germanic peoples were thronging into the region. Before the Franks cut a swath of destruction along their path and took the land along the Moselle and on the Hunsrück into their ownership about 475, Roman colonist families left the area and withdrew along with Roman troops. Only the higher areas of the Hunsrück were left more or less untouched.
Thomas Willoughby (1593- ?) colonist, born Wollaton, Nottingham, England was one of the first settlers in John Guy's colony at Cuper's Cove, Newfoundland, Canada. Willoughby is the third-eldest child of Bridget and Percival Willoughby. Willoughby, a noted black sheep of the family, was sent, along with his guardian Henry Crout, to Cuper's Cove to mend his ways and help in establishing his father's land ownership on the Bay de Verde Peninsula. He landed at Renews in 1612 before proceeding to Cuper's Cove.
Merrymount takes its name from the colony of Mare Mount, also known as Merry Mount or Merrymount. Colonist Thomas Morton wrote that the natives called the area "Passonagessit" and that the inhabitants translated this to "ma-re mount".Thomas Morton. "New English Canaan", Chapter XIV; published 1637 The colony, established in 1625, was officially named Mount Wollaston by the Puritan separatists, but as Morton and other non-Puritans gained influence in the area, the name Merry Mount gained common use.
In 1864 Thomas Ernest Briggs paid 10 pounds for "Swan Location 349". It is unclear whether Briggs erected a new building or made amendments to an existing structure on the site, although many convict-era colonist writings make reference to building on the Albion site in the mid to late 1860s. Records show that Briggs applied for a publican licence in 1870 and the original inn was called Halfway House. Briggs sold the property to Robert Napoleon Bullen in 1882.
There, he worked for the Otago Colonist but within a short time, he co-founded the Otago Daily Times. Vogel owned the newspaper until 1866 when it was taken over by a company, but stayed on as editor for another two years. When he lost the editorship, he set up a competing newspaper, the New Zealand Sun. This newspaper failed within a few months and Vogel became editor and general manager of the Daily Southern Cross in Auckland in April 1869.
Mercy Hazard was also a descendant of Governor Thomas Prence (1599–1673), a co-founder of Eastham, Massachusetts, who was a political leader in both the Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay colonies, and governor of Plymouth; and a descendant of Mayflower passengers, both of whom were signers of the Mayflower Compact, Elder William Brewster (c. 1567–1644), the Pilgrim colonist leader and spiritual elder of the Plymouth Colony, and George Soule (1593–1679), through his grandmother Susannah Barber Perry (1697–1755).
Napier reported heavy rain commencing on the 2nd, but reducing to showers on the 3rd.Heavy storm in the Bay, Hawke's Bay Weekly Times, Volume 2, Issue 57, 3 February 1868, Page 30 Nelson recorded 12.91 inches of rain over the period 3–5 February, with 7.03 inches falling on the 5th.LOSS OF LIFE, AND GREAT DESTRUCTION. OF PROPERTY, Colonist, Volume XI, Issue 1090, 6 March 1868, Page 2 Bealey 3.07 inches in 24 hours and Christchurch 1.5 inches in the same period.
Smythe had returned to England to find journalistic work difficult to obtain and was practically broke but managed to contribute to the Cornhill Magazine and the Pall Mall Gazette. both times through the assistance of Frederick Greenwood. This was enough to furnish the fare back to Australia in 1869 with Daniel E. Bandmann, the tragedian from who he acted as pilot. In 1870 he managed Robert Heller the magician, following in 1871 with the New Zealand colonist and drawing room impersonator, George Cotterell.
Romea states that Edison didn't mean any harm but the Artificials were stronger than the humans. Edison and Romea had broken the rules by fraternising together and so they were both on the run. A fight breaks out between the Artificials and the Colonists as Martha tries to reach the Fabricator, which would provide everything needed to colonise the target world. As the fight continues, Martha is thrown against a wall after being caught in a collision between a Colonist and an Artificial.
Lisa likely moved to St. Louis to enter the fur trade, the major part of the regional economy. By 1802, he had obtained a trade monopoly from French officials (the territory had traded hands again) with the Osage Nation. (The monopoly had formerly been held by Auguste Chouteau, a French colonist and first settler of St. Louis). But, after the Louisiana Purchase and annexation of the territory by the United States, Lisa's relationship with the new government officials was not as strong.
In 1676, Jacques Bourgeois, a colonist from the Nova Scotian settlement, settled in the area of Beaubassin (now the Tantramar Marshes). By 1685, its population had grown to 129, with 19 out of the 22 families living permanently in the region. Pierre Thibodeau, also from Port Royal, founded Chipody (now Shepody, New Brunswick) near Shepody Bay in 1698. At this time, the inhabitants often referred to the Petitcodiac, Memramcook, and Shepody River area as "Trois-Rivières" (Three Rivers) (not to be confused with Trois-Rivières, Quebec).
The main beneficiaries of this defection were the Conservative forces, supporting the protectionist, colonist and anti-socialist policies of Chancellor Otto von Bismarck. In the 1887 federal election, the party again lost half of their seats, dropping down to 32 Reichstag mandates. Though urged by his wife Princess Royal Victoria, Crown Prince Frederick William did not dare to meet trouble with Bismarck by openly taking the party's side. His early death in 1888 and the accession of his son William II terminated all liberal hopes.
Isaac Chauncey Haight (May 27, 1813 - September 8, 1886), an early convert to the Latter Day Saint Movement, was a colonist of the American West remembered as a participant in the Mountain Meadows massacre. He was raised on a farm in New York, and became a Baptist at age 18, hoping to become a missionary in Burma. He educated himself, and found work as a schoolteacher. He converted to Mormonism and set out to convert others in his neighborhood, building up a branch with forty members.
Municipal Council, New Zealand Colonist and Port Nicholson Advertiser, Volume I, Issue 104, 28 July 1843, Page 3 The British Government in 1843 had declared Governor Hobson's 1842 proclamation invalid, which was the cause to the dissolution of the Council.Civic Government, Evening Post, Volume LXXXIX, Issue 32, 8 February 1915, Page 21 There was no local Government in Wellington until 1864 with the establishment of the Wellington Town Board and no Mayor until Joseph Dransfield in 1870, with the formation of the Wellington City Council.
The Death of General Montgomery in the Attack on Quebec, December 31, 1775 John Trumbull, 1786. Antill was an American colonist living in the city of Quebec when in 1775 he joined the 2nd Canadian Regiment (also known as Congress' Own Regiment), as an engineer. He participated in the Battle of Quebec under General Richard Montgomery, and was present when Montgomery died from wounds received in the battle on December 31, 1775. After the failed attack on Quebec, Antill was sent to the Continental Congress in Philadelphia.
The Daily Colonist: 18 Jun 1913 & 27 Jan 1914 Strategic to their proposed Lulu Island branch line, the Canadian Northern Railway (CNoR), specified a Steveston terminal for their planned Vancouver Island ferry service. Revised to Woodward's Landing, CNoR acquired 250 acres for five miles of siding and a three-track slip capable of handling the largest ferries (150 feet).The Delta Times: 26 Oct 1912, 23 Aug 1913, 18 Jun 1914, & 30 Jul 1914 The CNoR dock never eventuated after the demise of the railway.
David Williams Higgins (30 November 1834 - 30 November 1917) was a Canadian newspaperman, politician, and author. Born in Halifax, Nova Scotia, the son of William B. Higgins and Mary Anne Williams, Higgins moved to Brooklyn with his parents and was educated there. He went to San Francisco, California in 1852 and in 1856 he founded the Morning Call newspaper, which he sold in 1858 when he moved to British Columbia. He settled in Victoria, British Columbia and was editor and proprietor of the British Colonist.
Young demonstrates evidence of thought that the British Empire was associated with noble virtues, and cannot be seen as a polemical anti-colonist, but can rather be viewed as a gradualist. However, his life's work led to a re-evaluation of the consideration of missionary work as an essential aspect of colonialism, because while he maintained his position as a missionary and not a native, he did manage to contribute to the shaping of modern Africa as a crucial pioneer of translation through his writing contributions.
Her crew attempted to anchor her, but she dragged the anchor, and all but one member of her crew abandoned ship when it became impossible to stop her from running aground on the coast of Ugamak Island. One crewman, 20-year-old oiler James L. Posey, remained aboard Alloway after the rest of the crew abandoned ship and even after she ran aground, despite the danger to his life.Anonymous, "Man Left on SS Alloway May Be Wise," The Daily Colonist (Victoria, British Columbia), February 14, 1929, p.
Christopher Levett, who made an exploration of the New England coast about that time.Wessagusset and Weymouth, Vol. 3, Charles Francis Adams Jr., Weymouth Historical Society1905) Signature and seal of Amias (née Cole) Thomson Maverick, November 1635 In 1628 Maverick married Amias Cole Thompson, widow of colonist David Thompson, who had been sent by Sir Ferdinando Gorges as an early explorer and settler to New Hampshire, and later settled on present-day Thompson Island in Boston Harbor. After Thompson's death, his wife inherited his properties, including Noddle's Island.
Obituary, Colonist, Volume LXII, Issue 15328, 17 March 1920, Page 1 Baigent had at least eight children; Albert Henry Baigent and Edward Sydney James Baigent by his first wife Margaret and the remaining six by his second wife Phoebe. Baigent's eldest son Albert died suddenly in October 1905 of an illness. His son John was part of the 29th Reinforcements Canterbury Infantry Regiment, C Company. He embarked for Glasgow on 15 August 1917 the New Zealand Shipping Company liner the SS Ruahine and then to France.
Harmen Jansen Knickerbocker (ca. 1648 - ca. 1720) was a Dutch colonist associated with the settlements of Albany (formerly Beverwyck and Fort Orange), Schaghticoke, Red Hook and Tivoli and in New Netherland. It appears to be the case that he never used the surname Knickerbocker, as we know it, during his own lifetime; that he went by a variety of surnames including Van Bommel, and the variety of forms that would evolve into Knickerbacker towards the end of his life, and Knickerbocker after his death.
Upham was born at 32 Gloucester Street in central Christchurch on 21 September 1908, the son of John Hazlitt Upham, a lawyer, and his wife, Agatha Mary Coates. Agatha was a granddaughter of pioneer colonist Guise Brittan. He boarded at Waihi School, near Winchester, South Canterbury, between 1917 and 1922 and at Christ's College, Christchurch, from 1923–27. From an early age he was a quiet and unusually determined boy, and on more than one occasion he intervened to defend schoolmates who were being bullied.
Warrenton is an unincorporated community in northeastern Fayette County, Texas, United States. Located on State Highway 237 between Spencer Pool and Coon Creek, twelve miles northeast of La Grange. Founded by William Neese, who landed in Galveston in 1847 and named the new settlement that grew around his store for Warren Ligon, another early colonist. This area was settled by many German colonists who, with an admixture of Anglos, formed several small farming communities based on the production of cotton, corn, and dairy products.
However, he was forced by a writ of habeas corpus to surrender the boy to official custody so his legal status could be determined. James Tilton lodged a protest, and the story was covered by newspapers ranging from the Victoria Colonist to the San Francisco Daily Evening Bulletin. On September 26, Justice Cameron ruled that Charles Mitchell was free. Tilton continued to live in Olympia for some years after his term as Surveyor General ended in 1861, when he was succeeded by Anson G. Henry.
As early as January 1916, Frank Patrick and Lester Patrick talked of the formation of a women's league to complement the Pacific Coast Hockey Association. The proposal included teams from Vancouver, Victoria, Portland and Seattle. The proposed league was never formed. In early January 1921, a team from Victoria, referred to in the Victoria Colonist as the Victoria and Island Athletic Association ladies team defeated a team from the University of British Columbia. This was the first reported occurrence of women's ice hockey in Victoria since 1914.
Philip Long (died 1832) was an American colonist who remained loyal to the British government during the American War of Independence. Though his origins and early life are cloaked in mystery and debate, it is thought that by 1775, he was an active colonial loyalist. He eventually donned a uniform when he joined the King's American Regiment. After the Treaty of Paris in 1783, Long left for Canada as a refugee where he was granted land by the British Crown for his military service.
The first Europeans to ascend the mountain, on 27 November 1837, were a six-man party comprising John Barton Hack, John Morphett, Samuel Stephens, Charles Stuart (South Australian Company's stock overseer), Thomas Davis (Hack's stockman), and John Wade (a "gentleman from Hobart Town").The Colonist, 28 December 1837, p. 2. Four weeks later, on 25 December 1837, four colonists, Robert Cock, William Finlayson, A. Wyatt, and G. Barton, left Adelaide to examine the country south east of Adelaide toward Lake Alexandrina.South Australian Gazette and Colonial Register.
41, West Cajoot departed Manila on March 15, heading to Hong Kong and from there to San Francisco. She dropped the anchor on May 16, bringing among other things, 449 tonnes of wild animal collection of noted hunter Frank Buck. The animals came from India and were loaded on board in Singapore and included cobra collection destined for New York City Zoo, snakes, elephants, leopards, tigers etc. Most of the cargo was consigned to Al G. Barnes, a circus owner.Daily Colonist, May 23, 1925, p.
Gwynyth Walsh (born 1956) is a Canadian actress best known for her role of the Star Trek character B'Etor, one of the Duras sisters.startrek.comTimes Colonist She also played constable Nimira in the Star Trek: Voyager episode "Random Thoughts". Walsh earned her Bachelor of Fine Arts at the University of Alberta and started her career appearing on stage across Canada and in the United States in many classics.Northern Stars For Shakespeare's Much Ado About Nothing she won a Dramalogue Award - Best Actress for her portrayal of Beatrice.
Automated sentry vehicles move to attack them but are immobilised when Green destroys the control vehicle with the tractor's rocket launcher. Donning space suits and entering the complex, they discover the power source to be a pulsating crystal embedded in machinery. However, unknown to the Spectrum officers, the Mysterons have killed and reconstructed Frazer, a Lunarville 6 colonist who has transported the atomic device to Crater 101 by Lunar Tank. Frazer has rigged the device to detonate two hours early to ensure the failure of the mission.
An eighteenth-century apothecary's shop recreated for the Deutsches Museum in Nürnberg During the trial, Rose was an influential and high ranking liveryman of the Society of Apothecaries, associating with London's wealthiest citizens. His brothers included Thomas Rose and Francis Rose who patented land in Jamaica, and John Rose, a London merchant, who traded with Jamaica and transported labourers there on his ships. Another brother, Fulke Rose, was an early colonist of Jamaica whose widow eventually married Sir Hans Sloane.Fulke Rose Profile & Legacies Summary.
Born to Charles and Nancy (Spaulding) Coolidge in Westminster, Massachusetts, he was a descendant on his father's side of Thomas Hastings (colonist) who came from the East Anglia region of England to the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1634. Coolidge attended the common schools. He began his career working at his father's chair factory, however in 1876 his father's factory burned down. After the destruction of his father's factory Coolidge became manager of the Boston Chair Manufacturing Co. in Ashburnham, Massachusetts and later of the Leominster Rattan Works.
Ordóñez arrived with the supply train in 1612 as the leader of nine Franciscan friars. When he reached the southernmost mission at Sandia Pueblo in August 1612, he produced a document that apparently made him Father Commissary, or head of the church in New Mexico, although later the document was said to be a forgery. Fray Alonso de Peinado accepted Ordóñez's commission. In Santa Fe, despite Governor Pedro de Peralta's protests, Ordóñez proclaimed that any soldier or colonist could leave if they wanted to.
Francisca Josefa de Castillo y Guevara was born into a wealthy family on October 6, 1671 in Tunja, which at the time was part of the New Kingdom of Granada. Her father, Francisco Ventura de CastiIlo y Toledo, an hidalgo colonist originally from Illescas in Spain, was initially appointed General lieutenant of the city and then Mayor. Her mother, María Guevara Niño y Rojas, was a native criolla of Tunja of Basque descent. Francisca Josefa had three siblings whose names were Catalina and Pedro Antonio Diego.
The parish of Doulting was part of the Whitstone Hundred. The parish includes the village of Bodden, which was founded in 1541 by Earl Michael Bodden (1512-1569). Notable former residents include Trish Bodden (1753-1777), who disguised herself as a man to fight in the American War of Independence (she was killed at Saratoga), and Amrose Bowden (sic), the first English colonist to settle in Maine.Bodden Family Crest Also a part of the parish is Prestleigh which was on the former Somerset and Dorset Joint Railway.
And in this document there is only one "villa Baka" mentioned, which means that there was only one Baka - with Slovak inhabitants. Afterwards in later notes from the 11th and 12th centuries AD Nemeth and Toth Baka are mentioned as two separate settlements. The Toth Baka - the Slovak one, is older. And as far as is known the first German colonist arrived in the 12th century AD, which means that the mention from the year 1075 is a mention of Toth Baka, which is today's Devičany.
The Black River settlement was a British settlement on the Mosquito Coast of present-day Honduras. It was established in 1732 by a British colonist named William Pitt (likely a distant relative of contemporary British politician, William Pitt the Elder). The settlement, made on territory claimed but never really controlled by Spain, was evacuated in 1787 pursuant to terms of the Anglo-Spanish Convention of 1786. The Spanish then attempted to colonize the area, but the local Miskitos massacred most of its inhabitants on September 4, 1800.
Stuart-Wortley was born in York, UK, in 1833 and was the third son of the 2nd Lord Wharncliffe and his wife, Lady Georgiana Elizabeth Ryder. He was the younger brother of the 1st Earl of Wharncliffe (1827–1899). Charles Stuart-Wortley-Mackenzie and James Stuart-Wortley were his uncles. Dudley Ryder, 1st Earl of Harrowby was his maternal grandfather. In 1850 he travelled to New Zealand as a colonist on the Charlotte Jane, one of the First Four Ships sent by the Canterbury Association.
Naysmith leaves Donner's wife and son in an isolated cabin in the Canadian Rockies. He then kidnaps and drugs a member of the conspiracy, learning that he has been assigned to assassinate Barney Rosenberg, a Martian colonist who is returning to Earth to retire. Naysmith teams up with a Finnish Brother named Juho Lampi to rescue Rosenberg, and learns that he was a close friend of the original Rostomily. After leaving Rosenberg with the Donners, Naysmith and his partner arrange to be captured by the conspiracy.
Percy Robertson RE (1868–1934) was an English watercolour landscape painter and etcher. Robertson was born in Bellagio, Lombardy, Italy. His father, also a painter and engraver, was Charles Robertson and his mother was Alice Mary, the daughter of the colonist Captain William Lonsdale (1799–1864), who supervised the founding of Port Phillip, later to become the location of Melbourne in Australia. Between 1883 and 1885, he was educated with his brothers at Charterhouse School in England, where he won the Leech Prize for drawing in 1884.
Brown launched his podcast and blog called Canadaland in October 2013. In an article in the Times Colonist, Mike Devlin described Brown as the "controversial host of the popular Canadaland podcast and crowdfunded news site." Devlin wrote that Brown was "polarizing...mostly because of his irreverent critiques and smart-ass attitude" whose "media and cultural critiques" are handled in a "gloves-off manner." According to Devlin, Brown became "something of a bad boy in Ontario" for attacking Canadian media "sacred cows" such as The Globe and Mail.
She went to England and bought The Sunday Times newspaper. His youngest daughter Kathleen Clarice Louise Cornwell (1872–1954) was a prolific writer first married to the music critic Herman Klein, and her daughter, Denise Robins, and her granddaughter, Patricia Robins, also became popular novelists. While another daughter Alice Anne Cornwell, married the well-known politician and 'very old colonist', John Whiteman. Cornwell, however, was also prone to arguments and litigation, having been convicted of assaulting 65-year-old Member of the Legislative Assembly McColl.
He played on John Wort Hannam's 2015 album Love Lives On,"John Wort Hannam's powerful writing continues tradition of drawing attention to a worthy cause". Dan St.Yves Calgary Herald, September 20, 2015 played with Susannah Adams at the Hornby Island Music Festival in 2017,"Victoria singer Susannah Adams was bitten by jazz bug". Lindsay Kines, Times Colonist, May 24, 2018 and in 2018 performed with 54-40 both locally and at Ottawa's CityFolk Festival."CityFolk review: 54-40 puts a tasty new spin on its old hits".
Elements among the region's colonist population starting in the 1840s sought to form their own country, despite their small number. Oregon pioneer John McLoughlin was employed as the "Chief Factor" (regional administrator) by the Hudson's Bay Company for the Columbia District, administered from Fort Vancouver. McLoughlin was a significant force in the early history of the Oregon Country, and argued for its independence. In 1842 McLoughlin (through his lawyer) advocated an independent nation that would be free of the United States during debates at the Oregon Lyceum.
After Trujillo's assassination in 1961, the government changed the name of the monument to, "Monumento a los Héroes de la Restauración" (Monument to the Heroes of the Restoration). So it is now dedicated to the heroes of the Dominican Restoration War, fought from 1863 to 1865 against Dominican Colonist and Spanish forces. The heroes include, but are not limited to; Francisco del Rosario Sánchez and Gregorio Luperón. The monument is located on a hill in the middle of Santiago, with views of the city and surrounding mountains.
The game can end in three different ways: # Mayor is selected and there are not enough colonists to refill the colonist ship with the appropriate number. # Captain is selected and the last VP chip is given to a player. (Additional chips are to be used during that round, once the supply is exhausted.) # Builder is selected and a player has built out their 12th city space, thus having no room left to build. In each case, players finish the current round before the game ends.
The island was used and occupied seasonally by the Karankawa people at the time of European encounter. During Spanish rule, Father José Nicolás Ballí, also known as Padre Ballí, owned the island in the 19th century, when it was known as the Isla de Santiago land grant. Padre Island had been granted in 1759 to his Spanish colonist grandfather, Nicolás Ballí, by King Charles III of Spain. The younger Ballí's parents were both Spanish immigrants to Mexico and owned vast amounts of land by royal grants.
A full-scale replica of the Ruskin Dam bridge was created for the episode. "The Red and the Black" was a technically demanding episode, which Carter later described, along with "Patient X", as "the most challenging and logically complex [project] of the season."Meisler, p. 196 The scene where Cassandra Spender is elevated into a colonist craft was shot by having a stuntwoman sit in a wheelchair, which was then lifted upward via a crane; the crane was then removed during post- production editing.
The handwritten Journal of New Netherland 1647 by an unknown Dutch colonist, from the manuscript collections of the National Library of the Netherlands, is an important source for the study of Kieft's governorship, the war, and New Netherland in the 1640s. Willem Kieft was appointed to the rank of director by the Dutch West India Company in 1638. He formed the council of twelve men, the first representative body in New Netherland, but ignored its advice. He tried to tax, and then, drive out, local Native Americans.
Their standard of living had been considerably reduced by a depression and by an increasing tax load. The Canadian frontier contrasted favorably, as a report in the January 1891 issue of the Winnipeg newspaper The Colonist reveals: "The settlers ... express themselves to be heartily glad to escape the excessive taxation, exacted from them while in the old country." They also claim that fifty percent less labour is to be expended to produce an equal result with that obtained at home, while fertilizing can be entirely dispensed with.
In that year the Iroquois made peace with the French. Adam Dollard des Ormeaux, a colonist and soldier of New France, was a notable figure regarding the Iroquois attacks against Montreal. The Iroquois soon resumed their assaults against Montreal, and the few settlers of Montreal fell almost completely to hostile Iroquois forces. In the spring of 1660, Adam Dollard des Ormeaux led a small militia consisting of 16 men from Montreal against a much larger Iroquois force at the Battle of Long Sault on the Ottawa River.
Alexander Kennedy Alexander Kennedy (11 November 1837 – 12 April 1936) was a Scottish colonist who was at the forefront of the British occupation of the Cloncurry region in Queensland, Australia. He established large cattle stations around Cloncurry and participated in several massacres of Aborginal Australians who were resident to this area. Kennedy was also involved in the creation of the copper mining industry in this region. In later life he became interested in aviation and was a founding investor and director of the Qantas airline company.
The colonists had kept secret a secondary characteristic of the black oil—that those infected with it for prolonged periods would gestate a new colonist lifeform, killing the host. Upon discovering this, the Syndicate vowed to work more closely with the colonists in the hope of being spared this fate, while only the Well-Manicured Man wished to continue working on a vaccination for resistance. This rejection led to his betrayal of the Syndicate, and to him committing suicide by car bomb before his duplicity was discovered.
Thomas Stamford Raffles, The History of Java, Oxford University Press, 1965 (originally published in 1817), For firearms using flintlock mechanism, the inhabitants of Nusantara archipelago is reliant on Western powers, as no local smith could produce such complex component. These flintlock firearms are completely different weapon and were known by another name, senapan or senapang, from Dutch word snappaan. The gun-making areas of Nusantara could make these senapan, the barrel and the wooden part is made locally, but the mechanism is imported from the European colonist.
31 His mother was the daughter of the prominent colonial official Colonel John Gibbes (1696–1764) and the granddaughter of the colonial governor Robert Gibbes. The Gibbes Museum of Art is named for his mother's family. James Ladson was also a 2nd great-grandson of Henry Woodward, the first British colonist in Carolina. Following the early death of his parents he was raised by his uncle John Gibbes (1733–1780), who owned the Grove Plantation that included today's Hampton Park and its surrounding neighbourhoods.
Full account of the loss of the barque Queen Bee, p. 5, "the Colonist", 23 August 1877 According to its Captain, J S Davies, everything went well on the journey, with the officers, passengers, and crew getting on well together. They had light winds to the Cape of Good Hope, but then encountered strong winds and heavy gales as it sailed along the 45th parallel until the ship was off Tasmania on 27 July. From there until it reached New Zealand it had northerly winds.
In 1936 the Dunsmuirs, a coal magnate family in Victoria, British Columbia, ordered 3 special order 1936 Buick-McLaughlin Phaetons for 3 of their daughters. In 1937 the Phaeton roadster bought for Elinor Dunsmuir was used to drive US president Franklin Roosevelt around Victoria, BC during his state visit. This is verified by photos appearing in the Daily Colonist and the Victoria Times newspapers Oct 1, 1937 because each of the Dunsmuir phaetons was unique. Two McLaughlin-Buick Phaetons were built for the 1939 Royal tour.
The new colony, Colony of Vancouver Island, was immediately leased to the HBC for a ten-year period, and Douglas was charged with encouraging British settlement. Richard Blanshard was named the colony's governor. Blanshard discovered that the hold of the HBC over the affairs of the new colony was all but absolute, and that it was Douglas who held all practical authority in the territory. There was no civil service, no police, no militia, and virtually every British colonist was an employee of the HBC.
There is also another new road to Marbella, to the southwest with Mijas just along a winding road round the mountain. From Alhaurín there is a view over the "Hoya de Málaga", Málaga's vale, full of lemon trees and other fruit trees. Villafranco del Guadalhorce is a village within Alhaurín el Grande's municipal term. It was founded by colonist families in the 1950sDecreto del Ministerio de la Gobernación del 6 de julio del año 1956 and subsidized by the Instituto Nacional de Colonización of the Spanish government.

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