Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Carroll H. Brown, E.D. Elliot: Los Angeles: Today, part of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet convent complex Lewis Leonard Bradbury House 1887 Queen Anne: Samuel Newsom and Joseph Cather Newsom: Los Angeles: Demolished in 1929 Margaret E. Crocker Mansion 1886 Queen Anne: John Hall Los Angeles: Demolished in 1908 Rose Mansion 1888 Queen ...
Laydon's mother Anne Burras was one of the first two women to arrive in Jamestown, along with Mistress Forrest who employed Anne as a maidservant. [2] In 1608, shortly after arriving at Jamestown, Anne married carpenter John Laydon. He had arrived in 1607 aboard the Susan Constant. [3] Virginia was born in October 1609 and baptized in Jamestown ...
John D. Williams may refer to: John David Williams or John David (born 1946), Welsh bassist and songwriter John Davis Williams (1902–1983), American academic administrator
The force, which was placed under the command of Colonel John March, totalled 1,150 soldiers and 450 sailors, and was carried by a fleet of 24 ships, including the 50-gun Royal Navy warship Deptford under the command of Captain Charles Stuckley, and the 24-gun New England ketch Province Galley led by Cyprian Southack.
AOL latest headlines, entertainment, sports, articles for business, health and world news.
Siege of Saint John (1645) – d'Aulnay defeats La Tour in Acadia From 1640 to 1645, Acadia was plunged into what some historians have described as a civil war. [ citation needed ] The war was between Port Royal, where the Governor of Acadia Charles de Menou d'Aulnay de Charnisay was stationed, and present-day Saint John, New Brunswick , where ...
John Montgomery was born in Gagetown. He owned the tavern (Montgomery's Tavern in Toronto, Ontario) which served as a base for the rebels during the Upper Canada Rebellion. His parents were loyalists who fled from New York following the American revolution. Annie Babbitt Bulyea (1863-1934) was born in Gagetown. She was a Canadian temperance leader.
There is a stone marker near the Nova Scotia visitor centre off the Trans-Canada Highway in Amherst, Nova Scotia commemorating the village's existence. The pastured fields of the former Beaubassin village contain extensive archaeological resources including glass and ceramic artifacts and charred buildings that attest to the Acadian way of life.