Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
St. Marys is a town in southwestern Ontario, Canada. It is located at the confluence of the north branch of the Thames River and Trout Creek southwest of Stratford, and is surrounded by the Township of Perth South in Perth County, Ontario. St. Marys operates under its own municipal government that is independent from the county's government.
The College of Veterinarians of Ontario is the body charged by the Government of Ontario with regulating practising veterinarians in the province. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The authority comes from the Veterinarians Act , RSO 1990, c V.3. [ 2 ]
St. Marys Cemetery is a cemetery located in St. Marys, Ontario. It is most notable for being the burial place of Canadian Prime Minister Arthur Meighen (1874–1960). [ 1 ] Opened in 1885 to relieve the full Protestant Cemetery, it is the resting place for Protestants in the area.
St. Andrew's West Cemetery, Cornwall – John Sandfield Macdonald; St. Columba's Cemetery, Pembroke – Frank Nighbor, Bishops for the Diocese of Pembroke; St. Mark's Cemetery, Port Hope – Vincent Massey; St. Mary's Cemetery, St. Marys – Arthur Meighen; St. Mary's Catholic Cemetery, Barrie – Dan Maloney
Gilbert Howard McIntyre (February 17, 1852 – December 1, 1913) was a Canadian politician.. Born in St. Mary's, Canada West, the son of George Maclntyre and Margaret Howard, McIntyre was educated at St. Mary's Grammar School and the Ontario College of Pharmacy in Toronto.
Thomas Boy Guest was an Ontario political figure. He represented Perth South in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1871 to 1874. He was born in Ireland in 1816. [1]He served as reeve of St. Mary's in 1855 to 1856, warden for Perth County in 1856 and mayor of St. Mary's in 1864.
St. Mary's was the site of a planned village within early Victoria County, in the Canadian province of Ontario.The site was laid aside in the surveying of the county in the 1830s, but was later found to be unusable when limestone was discovered two inches below the ground.
Shirley Lavinia Thomson, CC OOnt (née Cull; February 19, 1930 – August 10, 2010) was a Canadian civil servant.. Born in Walkerville, Ontario, [1] she received a B.A. degree in history in 1952 from the University of Western Ontario.