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First published on June 24, 1852, by John Boyd, [2] [3] the paper was eventually acquired by Casket Printing and Publishing Company. [4]Brace Publishing Limited, a division of the Halifax newspaper The Chronicle Herald, acquired the newspaper in 2012 before being subsumed into the Chronicle Herald's expanded SaltWire Network in 2017.
On their passage to Antigonish eight days later, Hierlihy’s oldest daughter died. [22] (She is the first British person buried in Antigonish.) He fought alongside John Small in the French and Indian War. John Small supported his application for a land settlement in Nova Scotia. [23] He died at age 63 on 19 Sepatember 1797, and was buried in ...
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William Edward Power (September 27, 1915 - November 29, 2003) [1] was consecrated Bishop of the Diocese of Antigonish, Canada on July 20, 1960: installed August 10, 1960: resigned December 17, 1986. Power died in 2003.
He was born in Antigonish, Nova Scotia and became a merchant by career. Kirk was first elected to Parliament at the Antigonish—Guysborough riding in a by-election on 16 March 1936 then re-elected for full terms there in 1940, 1945, 1949 and 1953. Kirk was defeated in the 1957 election by Angus Ronald Macdonald of the Progressive Conservative ...
James Morrison. James Morrison (July 9, 1861 – April 13, 1950) was the longest-serving bishop of the Diocese of Antigonish, Nova Scotia, Canada.Although one of the last powerful and austere Roman Catholic bishops in Canada, Morrison presided over a diocese that created one of the most successful Catholic social movements in Canada.
Roman Catholic bishops of Antigonish (6 P) Pages in category "People from Antigonish County, Nova Scotia" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total.
[1] MacIsaac was re-elected with a 265-vote margin on October 13, 1970, in a general election. [2] On September 17, 1972, [3] MacIsaac resigned his seat to run federally for the Progressive Conservatives in Cape Breton Highlands—Canso. He made two unsuccessful attempts to win the seat in the 1972 and 1974 federal elections. [4]