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St. Boniface Industrial School was a Canadian Indian residential school that operated in what is now the St. Boniface neighbourhood of Winnipeg, Manitoba from 1890 to 1905. [ 1 ] : 362 The school was built with funds from the Government of Canada and was operated by Archdiocese of Saint-Boniface and the Grey Nuns of Manitoba. [ 2 ]
Sturgeon Lake (Calais) Residential School (St. François/Francis Xavier Boarding school) [21] Calais: AB: 1907 1961: RC Fort Vermilion (St. Henri) Residential School [22] Fort Vermilion: AB: 1903 1968: RC Wabasca (St. John’s) Residential School [23] Wabasca: AB: 1902 (new school built in 1949) 1966: AN Desmarais (St. Martin’s) Residential ...
Saint Boniface School may refer to: St. Boniface Indian School; The school of Saint Boniface Church (New Vienna, Iowa) See also. Université de Saint-Boniface
St. Joseph Hospital was founded in 1906 in Nashua, by the parish of St. Louis de Gonzague primarily to serve Nashua's French Canadian community. The Sisters of Charity of Montreal began to staff it in 1907. The hospital was dedicated on 1 May 1908, [5] the Feast of St. Joseph the Worker. The sister also started a nursing school.
It was broadly formed in 1998 with the voluntary amalgamation of the Norwood and St. Boniface School Divisions. Following the 2001 announcement by the Minister of Education, Training and Youth to reduce Manitoba's school divisions from 54 to 37, the St. Vital School Division merged with St. Boniface in 2002, officially establishing the new ...
St. Boniface Diocesan High School is an independent Catholic high school in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. It was established in 1965 to provide Catholic high school education to English speaking students of the French Diocese of St. Boniface. [1] St. Boniface Diocesan High School had, throughout its history, Marianist Brothers and priests on ...
Saint Boniface Cathedral in 1927 Joseph Provencher. In 1817, settlers at the Red River Colony petitioned Joseph-Octave Plessis, Bishop of Quebec, for a resident priest.In 1818, Plessis sent Rev. Joseph-Norbert Provencher, Rev. Dumoulin and seminarian Guilaume Etienne Edge to open a mission on the Red River in present-day Manitoba, where the majority of settlers were Irish and Scottish ...
Sum Ying Fung (née Eng, Chinese: 吴如英, 27 January 1899 – 6 December 2011), was a Chinese Canadian supercentenarian who was the oldest person in Canada in 2011. Sum Ying Eng was born in Wing On Village, Yanping, China in 1899. [35]