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In June 1994, the Association des Guides Francophones du Canada (AGFC), the association of French-speaking Guides of Canada, voted against a new protocol from the Girl Guides of Canada which asked for the return to female-only leaders and management, which would have resulted in the loss of approximately 60% of adult members, many of whom were ...
Marie-Louise Fébronie Chassé was born on August 29, 1880, in Kamouraska, Quebec, to Pierre Charles Pitre Chassé and Marie-Catherine Fébronie Lévesque. She married her first husband, Étienne Leclerc, at age 20 in 1900. Leclerc was a fisherman and died of pneumonia on February 24, 1911, aged 39. They had six children; four survived to ...
Seignories have existed in Québec from 1627 until the British conquest of New France in 1763 and continued in the British colony of the Province of Quebec (1763–1791), then in Lower Canada (1840) and in the Province of Canada until 1854. [1] [2] The numbering is based on the below A.E.B. Courchene map. #
Province of Quebec in 1775. The objective of the American military campaign, control of the British province of Quebec, was frequently referred to as "Canada" in 1775.For example, the authorization by the Second Continental Congress to General Philip Schuyler for the campaign included language that, if it was "not disagreeable to the Canadians", to "immediately take possession of St. John's ...
Canadian Confederation (French: Confédération canadienne) was the process by which three British North American provinces—the Province of Canada, Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick—were united into one federation, called the Dominion of Canada, on July 1, 1867.
November 3: Quebec English school board elections; November 4: Municipal by-election in Ward 15 Don Valley West, Toronto; Municipal by-election in Ward 3, West Lincoln, Ontario [45] November 5: Municipal by-election in Ward 3, St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador; November 8: Conseil Scolaire Francophone School District by-election
Date Event Change July 1, 1867 The Dominion of Canada was formed by the United Kingdom from three provinces of British North America: [8] [a] The Province of Canada, which was split at the Ottawa River into the provinces of Ontario to the west, and Quebec to the east [b] New Brunswick [c] Nova Scotia [d] The capital was established at Ottawa.
Ontario Central Canada 109 1971 May 4: Saint-Jean-Vianney landslide: Geologic collapse Saint-Jean-Vianney, Quebec: Central Canada 31 1972 September 1: Blue Bird Café fire: Arson Montreal, Quebec Central Canada 37 1975 January 21: Gargantua bar attack: Arson Montreal, Quebec Central Canada 13 [16] 1977 June 21: Saint John city hall fire: Fire