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Berton and moved
With the advent of filmmaking in New York Berton Churchill appeared in several motion pictures, and in the 1920s, following the use of sound in film, he moved to Hollywood, California.

Berton and Toronto
His mother, Laura Beatrice Berton ( née Thompson ) was a school teacher in Toronto until she was offered a job as a teacher in Dawson City at the age of 29 in 1907.
Berton joined the Toronto Star as associate editor and columnist in 1958, leaving in 1962 to commence The Pierre Berton Show, which ran until 1973.
Berton died at Sunnybrook hospital in Toronto, reportedly of heart failure, at the age of 84 on November 30, 2004.
* Pierre Berton, The Wild Frontier, More Tales from the Remarkable Past ( Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1978 ), chapter 3.
Berton reported that Toronto hockey fans also note that the Maple Leafs have not won a Stanley Cup since.
* Pierre Berton: 1967: The Last Good Year: Toronto: Doubleday Canada: 1997: ISBN 0-385-25662-0
* The Last Spike The Great Railway 1881 – 1885 Pierre Berton McCelland and Stewart Limited Toronto / Montreal 1971 0-771001327-2
* Pierre Berton The Last Spike McCelland and Stewart Ltd. 1971 Toronto / Montreal 0-7710-1327-2
The 2012 Berton House gala was held at Fort York in Toronto with a War of 1812 theme.
Berton wrote an article in the Toronto Star in 1992 comparing the Binder Twine Queen contest with beauty pageants, stating that " while other queen contests are fading away under the disapproving frowns of feminists, the Binder Twine Queen contest has never been healthier or more popular ".

Berton and .
Also Mrs. Berton Korman, Mrs. Morton Rosen, Mrs. Jacques Zinman, Mrs. Evelyn Rosen, Mrs. Henry Schultz, Mr. and Mrs. I. S. Kamens, Mrs. Jack Langsdorf, Mrs. Leonard Liss, Mrs. Gordon Blumberg, Mrs. Oscar Bregman, Mrs. Alfred Kershbaum and Mrs. Edward Sabol.
* 1910 – Berton Roueché, American writer ( d. 1994 )
* 1876 – Berton Churchill, American actor ( d. 1940 )
* 1920 – Pierre Berton, Canadian journalist and writer ( d. 2004 )
Later he obtained the benefice of rector at the church of Berton in the Diocese of Norwich in England, a nation he never visited.
It was also during this period that future author Pierre Berton edited and served as principal cartoonist for the student newsletter, The Microscope.
Notable residents of Whitehorse include Audrey McLaughlin, the first woman to lead a represented political party ( NDP ) in Canadian federal politics, who has resided in Whitehorse since 1979, Robert W. Service, author of " The Cremation of Sam McGee ", who lived in Whitehorse from 1904 to 1908, and Pierre Berton, an author and television host, born in Whitehorse.
* October 10 – Berton Churchill, Canadian actor ( b. 1876 )
* December 9 – Berton Churchill, Canadian actor ( d. 1940 )
The musician-critic Benny Green sarcastically called Beiderbecke " jazz's Number One Saint ," while Ralph Berton compared him to Jesus.
" According to Ralph Berton, he was " as usual gazing off into his private astronomy ," but his cornet, Condon famously quipped, sounded " like a girl saying yes.
* Berton, Ralph.
Balzac's house in Paris, seen from the Rue Berton.
* In 1965, Berton Roueché described his wonderful trip along the Green River that set out from the Circle S Ranch in Cora, Wyoming in Subletter County with the ranch's foreman Thomas Scholebo.
See Roueche, Berton, Reporter at Large: Something About a River, The New Yorker p. 105 ( October 23, 1965 ).
As historian Pierre Berton put it, the cooperation between Canada's French and English speaking communities " was the secret of Expo's success — ' the Québécois flair, the English-Canadian pragmatism.
'" However, Berton also points out that this is an over-simplification of national stereotypes.
Gambler and Southern gentleman Hatfield ( John Carradine ) joins them and at the edge of town, the stage is flagged down by banker Henry Gatewood, ( Berton Churchill ), who is absconding with $ 50, 000 embezzled from his bank.
Pierre Francis de Marigny Berton, ( July 12, 1920 – November 30, 2004 ) was a noted Canadian author of non-fiction, especially Canadiana and Canadian history, and was a well-known television personality and journalist.
An accomplished storyteller, Berton was one of Canada's most prolific and popular authors.
She met Frank Berton in the nearby mining town of Granville shortly after settling in Dawson and teaching kindergarten.
Like his father, Pierre Berton worked in Klondike mining camps during his years as a history major at the University of British Columbia, where he also worked on the student paper The Ubyssey.
Berton himself was conscripted into the Canadian Army under the National Resources Mobilization Act in 1942 and attended basic training in British Columbia, nominally as a reinforcement soldier intended for The Seaforth Highlanders of Canada.

moved and Toronto
Born Joseph Aloysius Dwan in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Dwan moved with his family to the United States when he was 11 years old.
He moved to Toronto to start production.
As the company expanded into the East, head office functions were moved to Toronto.
Simcoe moved the capital to Toronto in 1793, renaming the settlement York after Frederick, Duke of York, George III's second son.
At age two, the family moved to Toronto, Canada where her father worked at the Norwegian air force base on Toronto Island during World War II.
In June 2010, the team's scheduled 2010 series against the Toronto Blue Jays at Rogers Centre was moved to Philadelphia, because of security concerns for the G-20 Summit.
The capital moved from Montreal to Toronto in 1849 when rioters, spurred by a series of incendiary articles published in The Gazette, protested the Rebellion Losses Bill and burned down Montreal's parliament buildings.
In 1976, Bob Lurie bought the team, saving it from being moved to Toronto.
In 1892, Victoria University moved from Cobourg to its current campus on Queen's Park Crescent, south of Bloor Street ( at Charles Street West ), in Toronto.
On February 1, 1796, the capital of Upper Canada was moved from Newark ( now Niagara-on-the-Lake ) to York ( now Toronto ), which was judged to be less vulnerable to attack by the Americans.
When the capital was first moved to Toronto from Newark ( present-day Niagara-on-the-Lake ) in 1796, the Parliament Buildings of Upper Canada were located at the corner of Parliament and Front Streets, in buildings that were burned by U. S. forces in the War of 1812, rebuilt, then burned again by accident.
After graduating from Mount Douglas Secondary School in 1996, she moved to Toronto to reside with her sister Lisa Anne.
Several clans moved to Canada, in particular the Greater Toronto Area, home to what Canadian law enforcement call the Siderno Group, which has been here since at least the 1950s.
* Joan Jefferson Ames Vrooman, Writer from Toronto, Ontario, Canada who moved to Cortland in 1954 and authored the popular " Cheese and Crackers " column in the Cortland Standard, daily newspaper.
She formed a relationship with fellow novelist Graeme Gibson soon after and moved to a farm near Alliston, Ontario, north of Toronto, where their daughter Eleanor Jess Atwood Gibson was born in 1976.
* Memphis Southmen ( had started out as the Toronto Northmen, but moved to Memphis, Tennessee before the start of the season ) 1974 – 1975 / Memphis Grizzlies 1975 (" official " team change name to Grizzlies after league folded in attempt to join the NFL ).
In 1967, the College of Optometry of Ontario, at the time an independent institution in Toronto, moved to Waterloo and became affiliated with the university as the School of Optometry.
It moved to Toronto in 1958 after the NHL withdrew its support for the International Hockey Hall of Fame in Kingston, Ontario.
Toronto proved to be only a short-term home, and in October 1993, after a call for volunteers to host the system, it was moved to St. Norbert College.
The family moved to North Bay, Ontario, then Halifax, Nova Scotia before returning to Toronto in 1946.
Consequently, the capital was moved to alternating locations in Montreal and Toronto, and then later to Ottawa in 1857.
In 1948 Mitchell moved to Toronto, Ontario to become the fiction editor for Maclean's magazine.
In 1963, Rogers moved to Toronto, where he was contracted by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation ( CBC ) to develop his debut in front of the camera, the 15-minute

0.185 seconds.