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Bishop Edward Cridge fonds
70-1004 · Fonds · 1876

The fonds consists of a Lay Reader's Licence issued to a Mr. Russell Jack by Bishop Edward Cridge in St. John, New Brunswick, 1876.

Cridge, Bishop Edward
UPC/013(04) · File · 1994-1997
Part of University Photograph Collection

File consists of photographs of the Blackburn Hall staff participating in Halloween dostume contests through out the 1990s. Photos include, Joanne War, Jan Carter, Anne Hoover, Sybil Nunn, Carla [Savvotka], Leona Fredericks, Gloria Guppy, Marie Bourbonnais, Jeanne Lynch, Judie Grook, and Colleen Kickey. Photos from 1994 include Glen [Easman], Cheryl Davis, and Joy [Maron].

Blais, Marie-Claire
JWRF/001(08) · File · 1974-1985
Part of John Wadland research files collection

File consists of Prof. John Wadland’s subject file on Marie-Claire Blais. Includes newspaper clippings on the biography of Marie-Claire Blais. Also, includes newspaper clippings about Blais’ novels.

P926 · File · 1849
Part of Pamphlet collection

Octavo (24.2 cm x 15.7 cm), pp. 31. Original plain pink wrappers, pamphlet stitched binding. Contemporary ink signature of 'Hon. J.A. Irving' [Jacob Aemilius Irving, 1797-1856] to upper cover. Irving came to Upper Canada in 1834 and settled in the Niagara peninsula. In 1843 he was appointed the first warden for the district of Simcoe by the Governor-General, and was called to the Legislative Council of Canada. In the Council he was a supporter of Baldwin and Lafontaine. Lower cover detached but present. Wraps a little soiled and chipped, otherwise fine. TPL 2957. Blake disagreed with the Reform government's introduction of a bill to reimburse for losses incurred during the rebellion in Lower Canada in 1837-38. On Feb. 15 and 16, 1839, as Solicitor-General, "he delivered a major speech on the bill, analyzing the Upper Canadian political situation in pre-rebellion days, and taking as his theme the difference between self-serving loyalty to the person of a governor and his misguided policies and a higher loyalty to the maintenance of a free constitution." The incendiary speech resulted in several duelling challenges, one issued by John A. Macdonald. See DCB X, p. 57. [S1189]