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Registro de autoridad- CA QUA01331
- Entidad colectiva
- 1966-1999
Farm and Country was the successor to the publication "The Rural Co-operator." After re-branding in 1966, Farm and Country served as the news outlet for the Ontario Federation of Agriculture, operated at arms-length by an independent editorial board. Farm and Country continued as a bimonthly publication until 1997, when it was converted into a glossy magazine format. It would be published by Agricultural Publishing Company Ltd. (APC) until the final issue on July 5, 1999.
Frontenac County Loyal Orange Lodges (Ont.)
- CA QUA01335
- Entidad colectiva
- n.d.
The Loyal Orange Order, an ultra Protestant fraternal order, originated in County Armagh, Ireland about 1795. The two main tenets of the Order were loyalty to the British Crown and support of Protestantism. The conflict that took place in Ireland, 1688-1690, between William of Orange, king of England and his brother-in-law James II, deposed from the British Throne for his Catholicism, among other reasons, provide the imagery for the order. It appears that various groups as lodges were established in Canada early after the founding, perhaps brought by the British Army, but the movement was not organized until the arrival of Ogle Gowan in Canada in 1829. Gowan came from Wexford, Ireland and settled in Brockville In 1830. Gowan and a group established the Grand Lodge of British North America to control existing lodges and promote new ones. Transplanted to Canada, the Loyal Orange Order first attracted the Protestant Irish, so its high incidence in the counties of Lanark and Leeds and around the Rideau waterway is not surprising. After the 1850s Irish immigration dwindled but the Orange Order remained strong and attached to Sir John A. Macdonald's Conservative party. In 1876 there were twenty-one Orange Lodges in North Leeds. Gradually the ethnic character of the organization changed and lodges were assimilated into Canadian society.
- CA QUA01340
- Persona
- n.d.
Mr. G.M. Kinghorn was one of the most extensive grain buyers in the City of Kingston. He was resposible for the wharf located at the foot of Brock street. He had the wharf constructed as a convenience for the arrival and departure of the Wolfe Island and Cape Vincent Ferry steamers. In addition, Mr. Kinghorn was also the agent for the Ottawa and Montreal Forwarding Company.