Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "William Lyon Mackenzie" ¶ 25
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Mackenzie and spent
Mackenzie spent summer 1837 organizing vigilance and political unions throughout Upper Canada and holding large Reform meetings in the Home District.
On Tuesday, December 5, Mackenzie grew increasingly erratic and spent the day attempting to punish the property or families of leading Tories instead of marching his men on Toronto.
On his return to Canada in 1907, Steele assumed command of Military Division No. 13 in Alberta and the District of Mackenzie, and then in 1910 assumed command of Division No. 10 at Winnipeg, where he spent his time regrouping Lord Strathcona's Horse and in preparing his memoirs.
Crerar spent some time in the private sector before returning to politics in 1929, as a member of William Lyon Mackenzie King's Liberal Party.
In February 1947, Mackenzie King fell ill with pneumonia and, after recovering, spent a month on vacation in the United States, with St. Laurent ( by then Secretary of State for External Affairs ) as Acting Prime Minister.
He spent ten years as a printer travelling through Canada and the United States and becoming involved in the Reformist movement of William Lyon Mackenzie.
Appointed colonel of the 41st U. S. Infantry ( later 24th U. S. Infantry, one of the Buffalo Soldier regiments ) in 1867, Mackenzie spent the rest of his career on the Frontier.
Mackenzie spent two years exploring and trading for the Pacific Fur Company in the Willamette Valley, along the Columbia River, in eastern Washington and northern and central Idaho.
Mackenzie signed for Shrewsbury on 15 May 2006 on the Bosman ruling from Chester City, where he had spent two years as predominantly first choice goalkeeper.

Mackenzie and 1831
In 1831 the Tories expelled Mackenzie from the Assembly, and the conflict escalated.
Henry Mackenzie ( August, 1745-14 January 1831 ) was a Scottish novelist and miscellaneous writer.
Meanwhile, the 11th Parliament of Upper Canada met in January 1831 and Mackenzie continued to denounce abuses in the province.
In the legislative session that opened in November 1831, Mackenzie demanded investigations of the Bank of Upper Canada, the Welland Canal, King ’ s College, the revenues, and the chaplain ’ s salary.
This was too much for the Assembly, and in December 1831, they voted to expel Mackenzie by a vote of 24 to 15.
Macdonell was a conservative legislative councillor from 1831 leading the mainly Irish settlers against the Reform movement and Mackenzie.
With Friedrich von Bramann and English physician Morrell Mackenzie ( 1837 – 1892 ), he attended to Frederick III ( 1831 – 1888 ), when the emperor was dying of laryngeal cancer.

Mackenzie and throughout
From Ottawa, the royal couple were accompanied throughout by Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, to present themselves in North America as King and Queen of Canada.
To this were joined from time to time various estates scattered throughout Ross-shire, most notably the districts around Ullapool and Little Loch Broom on the coast of the Minch, the area in which Ben Wyvis is situated, and a tract to the north of Loch Fannich-which was acquired by the ancestors of Sir George Mackenzie ( 1630-1714 ), afterwards Viscount Tarbat ( 1685 ) and 1st Earl of Cromartie ( 1703 ).
This style of governance continued throughout the early years of the leadership of Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King.
The foreman worked under four ranch owners throughout the series: Judge Garth ( Lee J. Cobb ), John Grainger ( Charles Bickford ), Clay Grainger ( John McIntire ), and Col. Mackenzie ( Stewart Granger ).
Robert Wolfe, Donald Mackenzie, John Mann, Simon Gledhill, Richard Hills Nigel Ogden, Len Rawle, Matthew Bason and Michael Wooldridge are just a few of the many British organists who play regularly to audiences throughout the world.
Mackenzie was the father of General Ranald Slidell Mackenzie, who, after a successful Civil War career, commanded the 4th Cavalry Regiment ( United States ), securing the line of settlement in Texas and throughout the West.
In the east, they reach as far as the Mackenzie Mountains, being found throughout the Yukon, aside from the northern coasts, and in border regions of the neighboring provinces.
In 1863 the Throat Hospital in King Street, Golden Square, was founded, largely owing to his initiative, and by his work there and at the London Hospital ( where he was one of the physicians from 1866 to 1873 ) Morell Mackenzie rapidly became recognized throughout Europe as a leading authority, and acquired an extensive practice.
In 1945, Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, having flown the Union Jack over Parliament throughout the war, made the Canadian Red Ensign the official Canadian flag by Order in Council.

Mackenzie and Upper
* 1837 – Canadian journalist and politician William Lyon Mackenzie calls for a rebellion against the United Kingdom in his essay " To the People of Upper Canada ", published in his newspaper The Constitution.
Accordingly, rebellion in favour of responsible government rose in both regions ; Louis-Joseph Papineau led the Lower Canada Rebellion and William Lyon Mackenzie led the Upper Canada Rebellion.
After the Lower Canada Rebellion led by Louis-Joseph Papineau in 1837, and the Upper Canada Rebellion led by William Lyon Mackenzie, Lord Durham was appointed governor general of British North America and had the task of examining the issues and determining how to defuse tensions.
His maternal grandfather was William Lyon Mackenzie, first mayor of Toronto and leader of the Upper Canada Rebellion in 1837.
* November – December – In the Canadas, William Lyon Mackenzie leads the Upper Canada Rebellion and Louis-Joseph Papineau leads the Lower Canada Rebellion.
The Firebrand: William Lyon Mackenzie and the Rebellion in Upper Canada ( 1956 ) online edition
Lord Durham was sent to The Canadas in 1837 to investigate the circumstances surrounding the Lower Canada Rebellion of Louis-Joseph Papineau and the Upper Canada Rebellion of William Lyon Mackenzie, which had both occurred earlier that year.
A group of Canadian rebels, led by William Lyon Mackenzie, seeking a Canadian republic, had been forced to flee to the United States after leading the failed Upper Canada Rebellion in Upper Canada ( now Ontario ).
When news of the arrest of the Patriote leaders reached Upper Canada, William Lyon Mackenzie launched an armed rebellion in December 1837.
John Lesslie, on the other hand, had settled in York, Upper Canada ( now Toronto ) and Mackenzie soon became employed at Lesslie's bookselling / drugstore business.
Mackenzie fell in love with Upper Canada and began writing for the York Observer.
In 1822, Edward Lesslie and the rest of his family, along with Elizabeth Mackenzie, joined Mackenzie and John Lesslie in Upper Canada.
Mackenzie took full advantage of the incident, returning to York and suing the perpetrators in a sensational trial, which propelled Mackenzie into the ranks of martyrs of Upper Canadian liberty, alongside Robert Thorpe and Robert Fleming Gourlay.
Mackenzie now aligned himself with John Rolph in arguing that American-born settlers in Upper Canada should have the full rights of British subjects.
Allying himself with Methodist minister Egerton Ryerson, who felt that the Methodist Church should share in the proceeds of sale of the clergy reserves, Mackenzie declared himself opposed to Strachan's plans for Upper Canada.
Mackenzie declared his intentions to run in the elections for the 10th Parliament of Upper Canada and entered into correspondence with Reformers like Joseph Hume in England and John Neilson in Lower Canada.
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 ).
Unfortunately for Mackenzie and the Reformers, the mood of Upper Canada had changed somewhat from 1828 for a number of reasons: Sir John Colborne, who replaced Sir Peregrine Maitland as lieutenant governor in 1828, was less allied with John Strachan and the Family Compact ; Colborne had encouraged immigration to Upper Canada from the British Isles, and these new settlers felt more loyalty to the home country than Upper Canadians born in the New World ; and the Reform party had seemed to accomplish little during the two years they had controlled the Assembly.
Consequently, the 1830 election saw the Reformers win only 20 of the 51 seats in the 11th Parliament of Upper Canada, though both Mackenzie and Ketchum were returned as members for York.

0.650 seconds.