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Quebec and Mercury
* 1805-Foundation of The Quebec Mercury ( newspaper ) by Thomas Cary, supporter of the British Tories.
* July 20 – 21 – The Short S. 20 Mercury, flying as a component of the Short Mayo Composite aircraft combination, makes the worlds first commercial heavier-than-air crossing of the North Atlantic Ocean, flying non-stop 4, 667 km ( 2, 900 miles ) from Foynes, Ireland, to Montreal, Quebec, Canada, with a 454-kg ( 1000-lb ) payload.
The Quebec Mercury had previously insinuated that the French Canadians and the Americans were plotting against England.
The Quebec Mercury was an English language weekly newspaper published in Quebec City from 1805 to 1863.
The Quebec Mercury was deeply conservative, advocated for the assimilation of French Canadians, and sought to " unfrenchify " the colony.
* The Quebec Mercury, in the Collection numérique of Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec.
fr: The Quebec Mercury
pl: Quebec Mercury
# REDIRECT Quebec Mercury
" In 1821, the Caledonian Mercury wrote of the British Empire, " On her dominions the sun never sets ; before his evening rays leave the spires of Quebec, his morning beams have shone three hours on Port Jackson, and while sinking from the waters of Lake Superior, his eye opens upon the Mouth of the Ganges.
He worked as a journalist at the Quebec Mercury and Le Canadien.

Quebec and defunct
* Cumberland ( pharmacy ) a defunct chain of pharmacies located in Quebec and eastern Ontario
: This page is about the ( now defunct ) sound card company based in Quebec City, Canada, named Ad Lib, Inc. — not to be mistaken with the software company Adlib Software or Adlib Information systems.
* Parti de la Democratie Socialiste, a defunct provincial political party of Quebec, Canada
* Chicoutimi — Saguenay, a defunct federal electoral district in Quebec, Canada
* Charlevoix — Saguenay, a defunct federal electoral district in Quebec, Canada
* Collège Sainte-Marie de Montréal, Montreal, Quebec, defunct
* Héritage, a defunct supermarket retailer based in Quebec, Canada
Quebecor was true to its word, closing down CKXT completely on November 1, 2011, becoming the fifth major TV station in Canada ( and the first in a big-three Canadian city ) to have gone dark since 1977 ( when CFVO-TV in Hull, Quebec left the air ; all other defunct stations in Canada became repeaters of other stations almost seamlessly ).
* Chambly ( electoral district ), a defunct federal electoral district in Quebec, Canada, replaced by Chambly-Borduas
* Chambly-Borduas, a defunct federal electoral district in Quebec, Canada
* Saint-Jean Lynx, a defunct Quebec Major Junior Hockey League team
The station was the first major TV station in Canada to have gone dark since 1977, when CFVO-TV in Hull, Quebec left the air ( that station would soon become Radio-Québec outlet CIVO-TV on the same licence ); all other defunct stations in Canada became repeaters of other stations almost seamlessly.
His journalism career dates back to the 1970s as a print reporter covering Quebec politics for the Montreal Gazette and the defunct Montreal Star.
* Verdun Maple Leafs ( ice hockey ), a defunct Quebec Major Junior Hockey League team
** Pierrefonds, Quebec, a defunct city now part of the borough
Bissonnet was formerly involved in the federal New Democratic Party and its Quebec wing, the defunct Nouveau Parti démocratique du Québec.
* Alliance Quebec ( defunct )
A few years after the initial Journal he founded the Journal de Quebec and the defunct experiment gone wrong Philadelphia Journal.
At noon on January 6, 1979, CKLG-FM changed to CFOX, a call sign first used by a defunct AM radio station in Montreal, Quebec in the 1960s and 1970s.
Additional NHL jerseys and logos were also available including those of the defunct Atlanta Flames, Winnipeg Jets, Colorado Rockies ( NHL ), Quebec Nordiques as well as the old style Los Angeles Kings, Washington Capitals and Vancouver Canucks uniforms of the 1970s and the 1980s.
* Internet Archive of Alliance Quebec website ( 1997-2005 ), aq. qc. ca ( defunct )
* Internet Archive of Alliance Quebec website ( 2003-2005 ), alliancequebec. ca ( defunct )

Quebec and 19th
* 1898 – Gaspard Fauteux, Canadian politician, 19th Lieutenant Governor of Quebec ( d. 1963 )
They developed in the socio-economic and political cleavages that existed during the first three decades of the 19th century, and had the support of the business, professional and established Church ( Anglican ) elites in Ontario and to a lesser extent in Quebec.
John A. Macdonald's successful leadership of the movement to confederate the provinces and his subsequent tenure as prime minister for most of the late 19th century rested on his ability to bring together the English-speaking Protestant oligarchy and the ultramontane Catholic hierarchy of Quebec and to keep them united in a conservative coalition.
* French group, under which they also included the countries that codified their law either in 19th or in the first half of the 20th century, using the Napoleonic code civil of year 1804 as a model ; this includes countries and jurisdictions such as Italy, Portugal, Spain, Louisiana, states of South America ( such as Brazil ), Quebec, Santa Lucia, Romania, the Ionian Islands, Egypt, and Lebanon
Since the 19th century, much of the square dance repertoire has been derived from jigs and reels from Scotland and Ireland, sometimes in relatively unaltered form, sometimes as played in the old time music tradition or as adapted by other cultures such as that of Quebec.
As immigrants flooded into the United States in the mid to late 19th century, the population of Lawrence abounded with skilled and unskilled workers from almost every nation in Europe: Ireland, France, Italy, Germany, Belgium, Poland, and Lithuania ; French-Canadians from the provinces of Quebec, New Brunswick, and Prince Edward Island ; and farm girls from all over New England.
The 19th century saw an influx of immigrants to Cohoes to work in the mills, particularly French Canadians from Quebec, and Irish.
He served as the 19th Premier of Quebec from 22 June 1960, to 16 August 1966.
However, Manning did not dispel the possibility of Reform naturally expanding into Quebec in the early 1990s, as in his 1992 book, The New Canada, Manning credits the populist reform tradition in Canada as not having begun in the west, and mentions its early roots in the 19th century reform parties of Upper Canada ( Ontario ) Lower Canada ( Quebec ), and Nova Scotia that fought against colonial elites such as the Family Compact and Château Clique and sought to replace them with responsible governments.
Modern Franco-Ontarians are instead descended primarily from people who moved to Ontario from Quebec or New Brunswick in the 19th and 20th centuries.
19th century print showing Quebec batteries firing on William Phips ' squadron during October 1690.
Her mother's family was French Canadian, having immigrated from Quebec in the middle of the 19th century ; her grandfather, Lambert Morin, changed his name to John Murray to avoid anti-French Canadian and anti-Catholic prejudice.
The result of the crisis was that by the end of the 19th century, French was no longer supported as an official language in Manitoba or the neighbouring North-West Territories, which in turn led to a strengthening of French Canadian nationalism in Quebec.
The Schools Question, along with the execution of Louis Riel in 1885, was one of the incidents that led to strengthening of French Canadian nationalism in Quebec in the late 19th century.
By the end of the 19th century, the bank was represented in all of the Maritimes, Quebec, Ontario and Manitoba.
* June 23 – Nérée Le Noblet Duplessis, politician, 19th Mayor of Trois-Rivières and father of 16th Premier of Quebec Maurice Duplessis ( b. 1855 )
The rural, conservative and Catholic Quebec of the 19th and early 20th centuries has given way to a confident, cosmopolitan society that has many attributes of a modern, internationally recognized community with a unique culture worth preserving.
At the peak of British colonization in Quebec in the late 19th century, about 25 % of Quebecers were Anglophones and Montreal, the largest city in Canada at the time, was a predominantly English-speaking city.
In the 19th century, Quebec experienced several waves of immigration, principally from England, Scotland and Ireland.
This section of the Timeline of Quebec history concerns the events relating to the province of Quebec, Canada between the enactment of the British North America Act and the end of the 19th century.
Robert Nelson ( August 8, 1794 – March 1, 1873 ) was an Anglo-Quebecer physician and a leading figure in the Lower Canada Rebellion in 19th century Quebec ( Lower Canada ).

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