Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Alexander Mackenzie" ¶ 7
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Mackenzie and also
Deborah Mackenzie regularly presents at weekends and in place of Sharma and Madera, while Rebecca Pike and Rachel Hodges also appear in these slots.
Only Mackenzie Bowell and the Viscount Bennett were given private funerals, Bennett also being the only former Prime Minister of Canada to die and be buried outside the country and Bowell the only whose funeral was not attended by politicians.
William Lyon Mackenzie King, PC, OM, CMG ( December 17, 1874 – July 22, 1950 ), also commonly known as Mackenzie King, was the dominant Canadian political leader from the 1920s through the 1940s.
* Mackenzie King, W. L. Industry and Humanity: A Study in the Principles Under-Lying Industrial Reconstruction ( 1918 ) online edition ; also full text online and downloadable.
Clathrates can also exist as permafrost, as at the Mallik gas hydrate field in the Mackenzie Delta of northwestern Canadian Arctic.
The Hanson family also includes younger siblings: Jessica Grace ( July 31, 1988 ), Avery Laurel ( November 6, 1990 ), Joshua Mackenzie ( January 7, 1994 ), and Zoë Genevieve ( January 14, 1998 ).
In 1973, Duke gave birth to Astin's half-brother Mackenzie Astin, who also became an actor.
Large peat bogs also occur in North America, particularly the Hudson Bay Lowland and the Mackenzie River Basin They are less common in the southern hemisphere, with the largest being the Magellanic Moorland, comprising some 44, 000 square kilometers.
The early 1990s was a quiet period for the band, though Ware produced a second BEF album in 1991, to follow 1982's original Music of Quality & Distinction ( again featuring Tina Turner and Billy Mackenzie, but this time also featuring artists such as Scritti Politti's Green Gartside, Lalah Hathaway, Billy Preston, and Chaka Khan ).
He also co-produced the posthumous album by Billy Mackenzie from the Associates, then went on to produce several Domino Records artists like James Yorkston, Archie Bronson Outfit ( whom he later managed ) and Clearlake.
* Mackenzie Crook, who also went on to The Office as well as TV to Go, before a role in the Pirates of the Caribbean films.
The Works of John Home were collected and published by Henry Mackenzie in 1822 with " An Account of the Life and Writings of Mr John House ," which also appeared separately in the same year, but several of his smaller poems seem to have escaped the editor's observation.
Edward and John Lesslie now opened a branch store of their business in Dundas, entering into a partnership with Mackenzie on the understanding that Mackenzie would move to Dundas to be the store's manager ; the store sold drugs, hardware, and general merchandise, and Mackenzie also operated a circulating library in Dundas.
Mackenzie supported some characteristically British institutions, notably the British Empire, primogeniture and the clergy reserves, but he also praised American institutions in the paper.
He was also critical of the Bank of Upper Canada, which was a monopoly and a limited liability company ( Mackenzie distrusted limited liability companies and favoured hard money ).
Mackenzie was also impressed with Jackson personally when he had the occasion to meet with the president.
Mackenzie was criticized for printing this letter ( not only by Tories but also by some Reformers such as Egerton Ryerson ) but it charted a course that Mackenzie would soon be travelling himself.
The Assembly also appointed Mackenzie as a government director of the Welland Canal Company and Mackenzie produced an exhaustive report on the company's financial situation, though he stopped short of accusing the company's directors of full-blown dishonesty.
Moving into fall 1837, Mackenzie attracted large crowds, but also began facing physical attacks from members of the Orange Order.

Mackenzie and served
Macdonald served 19 years as Canadian Prime Minister ; only William Lyon Mackenzie King served longer.
Two former prime ministers — Sir John Joseph Caldwell Abbott and Sir Mackenzie Bowell — served in the 1890s while members of the Senate ; both, in their roles as Government Leader in the Senate, succeeded prime ministers who died in office ( John A. Macdonald in 1891 and John Sparrow David Thompson in 1894 ), a convention that has since evolved toward the appointment of an interim leader in such a scenario.
His mother remarried in 1945 to Frank Mackenzie Ross, who later served as Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia, and the family relocated to Vancouver.
After leaving provincial politics, Stewart was invited to join the federal cabinet of William Lyon Mackenzie King, in which he served as Minister of the Interior and Mines.
Van Buren was initially reluctant to pardon Mackenzie because he did not want to offend the British, but he eventually acquiesced and Mackenzie was pardoned in May 1840, after he had served less than a year in jail.
During the winter, the frozen channel of the Mackenzie River, especially in the delta region, is crisscrossed with ice roads served by dogsleds and snowmobiles.
Athlone then served as Chancellor of the University of London until he was in 1940 appointed as Canada's governor general by George VI, king of Canada, on the recommendation of Prime Minister of Canada William Lyon Mackenzie King, to replace the Lord Tweedsmuir as viceroy, and he occupied the post until succeeded by the Viscount Alexander of Tunis in 1946.
In 1919, David L. Mackenzie — who served a dual role as Principal of Detroit Central High School and Detroit Junior College — was officially appointed first Dean of the college that he had originated in 1917.
In the federal election of 1921, he was elected as a Liberal member of Parliament, and served as Justice Minister under prime minister William Lyon Mackenzie King until 1924.
When the Liberals won the subsequent 1874 federal election, Blake joined the cabinet of Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie and served as Minister of Justice and President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada.
The Rideau Centre and the adjacent National Defence Headquarters building are both served by OC Transpo's Mackenzie King Transitway station, which is served by a number of major bus routes.
Howe served in the governments of Prime Ministers William Lyon Mackenzie King and Louis St. Laurent continuously from 1935 to 1957.
Bennett's government had limited success in dealing with the Depression, and was defeated in 1935, as Liberal William Lyon Mackenzie King, who had previously served two times as Prime Minister, was restored to power.
The community is served only by air, via the Aklavik / Freddie Carmichael Airport, and by winter ice road directly from Inuvik across the streams of the Mackenzie Delta.
He served in the federal Liberal cabinets of Mackenzie King and Louis St. Laurent.
He served in the short-lived Cabinets of Prime Minister Arthur Meighen in 1921 as Minister of Trade and Commerce until the government was defeated by William Lyon Mackenzie King's Liberals.
In 1921, he served in a number of defence portfolios in the Cabinet of William Lyon Mackenzie King.
He served as Postmaster General in the cabinet of William Lyon Mackenzie King.
In 1928, Walter Foster was appointed by Prime Minister Mackenzie King to the Canadian Senate and served as Speaker of the Canadian Senate from 1936 to 1940.
From December 1895 to July 1896 and 1897 Prior served as Controller of Inland Revenue in the cabinets of Prime Minister Sir Mackenzie Bowell and his successor Sir Charles Tupper.
Sir Thomas Noble Mackenzie GCMG ( 10 March 1854 – 14 February 1930 ) was a Scottish-born New Zealand politician and explorer who briefly served as the 18th Prime Minister of New Zealand in 1912, and later served as New Zealand High Commissioner in London.

Mackenzie and Minister
Alexander Mackenzie, PC ( January 28, 1822 – April 17, 1892 ), a building contractor and newspaper editor, was the second Prime Minister of Canada from November 7, 1873 to October 8, 1878.
As Prime Minister, Alexander Mackenzie strove to reform and simplify the machinery of government.
B. M. Hertzog and Canada's Prime Minister at that time, William Lyon Mackenzie King.
* 1823 – Sir Mackenzie Bowell, fifth Prime Minister of Canada ( d. 1917 )
He was in 1946 appointed as governor general by George VI, king of Canada, on the recommendation of Prime Minister of Canada William Lyon Mackenzie King, to replace the Earl of Athlone as viceroy, and he occupied the post until succeeded by Vincent Massey in 1952.
It was then announced from the Office of the Prime Minister of Canada on 21 March 1946 that George VI had, by commission under the royal sign-manual and signet, approved the recommendation of his prime minister, Mackenzie King, to appoint Alexander as his representative.
The Viscount and Viscountess Alexander of Tunis are greeted by Prime Minister of Canada William Lyon Mackenzie King | Mackenzie King upon the viceregal couple's arrival in Ottawa, 12 April 1946
Seated: Stanley Baldwin ( Prime Minister of the United Kingdom | United Kingdom ), King George V, William Lyon Mackenzie King ( Prime Minister of Canada | Canada ).
It was not until he was nearly 60 that St-Laurent finally agreed to enter politics when Liberal Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King appealed to his sense of duty in late 1941.
The scandal ultimately led to the resignation of Canada's first Prime Minister, Sir John A. Macdonald, and a transfer of power from his Conservative government to a Liberal government led by Alexander Mackenzie.
William Lyon Mackenzie King, the 10th Prime Minister of Canada ( 1921 – 1926 ; 1926 – 1930 ; 1935 – 1948 )
As Opposition leader, Bennett faced off against the more experienced Liberal Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King in Commons debates, and took some time to acquire enough experience to hold his own with King.
King George VI, Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon | Queen Elizabeth, and Prime Minister Mackenzie King in Banff, Alberta, 1939
Prime Minister of Canada | Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King becomes the first person to take the Oath of Citizenship ( Canada ) | Oath of Citizenship, from Chief Justice of Canada | Chief Justice Thibaudeau Rinfret, in the Supreme Court of Canada | Supreme Court, 3 January 1947
* Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie ( Canada )
* Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King
* December 10 – Mackenzie Bowell, Prime Minister of Canada ( b. 1823 )
** William Lyon Mackenzie King returns to office as Prime Minister of Canada.
** Canadian Prime Minister Mackenzie King, in English, and Justice Minister Ernest Lapointe, in French, give an international radio address, stating its intentions to declare war against Nazi Germany.

0.158 seconds.