Showing 13563 results

Authority record

Leeson, Wilfrid N. (Wilfrid Neill), 1847-1909

  • Person
  • 1847-1909

Rev. Wilfred Neill (Nevill) Leeson was born abt. 1847, in London, England.

He was a clergyman. He studied theology at Pembrooke College of Oxford University (B.D.). He was ordained deacon in 1873 and priest in 1874. He served as Champlain at Port Chalmers, New Zealand (1876-1877), Vicar of Witham-on-the-Hill, Lincolnshire, England (1877-1881), and Vicar of Patcham, Sussex (1881-1886).

In 1881, he married Agnes Eliza Ashby (1846–1941). He died on August 6, 1909, in Steyning, Sussex, England.

Leet, Seth P. (Seth Penn), 1851-1926

  • Person
  • 1851-1926

Seth Penn Leet was born on April 26, 1851, in Richmond, Le Val-Saint-François, Quebec.

He was a Canadian lawyer and judge. He was educated at Danville Academy, obtained a Model School diploma, and worked as a school teacher for a few years. In 1879, he graduated from McGill University (B.C.L.) and was called to the bar in 1880. He practised in Montreal in partnership with Dr. J.J. Maclaren and R.C. Smith. After the dissolution of the firm in 1895, he practised by himself. In 1880, he became a Secretary of the Canadian Sunday School Union. He also served on the Executive Committee of the Dominion Alliance.

In 1874, he married Catherine O. Colwell and in 1920, he remarried Mary Annis Adams Griffith (1865-1952). He died on July 26, 1926, in Montreal, Quebec.

Lefebvre de Bellefeuille, Famille, 1753-1837

L'histoire de la famille Lefebvre de Bellefeuille à Québec remonte à l'arrivée en Nouvelle France, quelque temps avant 1669, de Thomas Lefebvre, né à Rouen en France en 1647. Il fut un voyageur et un interprète du Roi pour le langage Abenaki. In 1703, on concéda à Lefebvre le territoire de Koessanouskek, près de la frontière du Maine, comme seigneurie. Son fils, Jean-François, s'établit à Terre-Neuve au début du XVIIIième siècle mais partit aussitôt que les Anglais prirent contrôle en 1713. Lefebvre de Bellefeuille fut le seul seigneur à s'établir de façon permanente dans une Seigneurie de Gaspé durant le régime français. Lui et ses fils, Georges et François, eurent beaucoup de succès dans la pêche et le séchage du poisson même après la mort du père en 1744.

Lefevre, Lily Alice Mary Cooke, 1853-1938

  • Person
  • 1853-1938

Born in Belleville, Ontario, of Irish immigrants, oldest of seven children, future poet Lily Alice Cooke was sent to the Villa Maria Convent in Montreal for her education. In 1886, she married Dr. John Lefevre, the Pacific District surgeon for Canadian Pacific, and the couple moved to Vancouver where she spent the rest of her life. She was left a widow with no children when the doctor died in 1906, having had a successful career not only in medicine but also as a city councillor and as president of the Vancouver Board of Trade. Their home, known as “Langaravine,” was a magnet for artists, writers and intellectuals; she became a patron of the arts, while continuing to write and publish her own poety both in Montreal and Vancouver. Among her frequent guests were fellow members of the Vancouver Poetry Society, the editor of the Vancouver Sun, Robert Cromie, William and Annie Dalton, E.J. Pratt, and Pelham Edgar. In 1931, she helped found the Vancouver Art Gallery. When Edward VII was crowned in 1901, she organized a Vancouver branch of the Imperial Order of Daughters of the Empire.

Lefroy, J. H. (John Henry), Sir, 1817-1890

  • n 83012001
  • Person
  • 1817-1890

John Henry Lefroy was born on January 28, 1817, in Ashe, Hampshire, England.

He was an English military man, colonial administrator, and scientist. He entered the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich in London in 1831 and became a 2nd lieutenant of the Royal Artillery in 1834. When the British government launched a project to study terrestrial magnetism, he was chosen to set up and supervise the observatory on Saint Helena. In 1842, Lefroy was sent to Toronto as the superintendent of the new Toronto Magnetic and Meteorological Observatory. He participated in the expedition to the Canadian Northwest in an attempt to map the geomagnetic activity of British North America from Montreal to the Arctic Circle, and locate the North Magnetic Pole (1843-1844). In 1848, he was made a member of the Royal Society. He remained in Toronto until 1853, continuing his observations and managing the observatory. He also helped found the Royal Canadian Institute, where he was the first vice-president in 1851-1852 and then president in 1852-1853. Before his return to London, England, he managed the transfer of the Toronto Magnetic and Meteorological Observatory to the provincial government. In London, he held various office positions in the British Army. Later, he became Inspector General of army schools and finally in 1868, director of the Ordnance Office. Lefroy was made a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) in 1870 and knighted in 1877 (KCMG).

In 1846, he married Emily Mary Robinson (1821–1859) and in 1860, he remarried Charlotte Anna Dundas (1824–1903). He died on April 11, 1890, in Liskeard, Cornwall, England.

Results 6851 to 6860 of 13563