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- Kingston, ON
- 1 Company and running between Hamilton. Toronto. Kingston, and Montreal. His health was rapidly restored,
- 2 [* Read Onagonah, built at Kingston in 1877 by Robert Davis. Registered at Kingston,
- 3 Mr. Clewlo was born in Kingston in 1861, where he grew up, and in the schools of
- 4 is one of the best-known lake sailors between Kingston and Port Arthur. He it was who, in the Edward
- 5 engaged in the grain trade between Toronto and Kingston. Then he was on the schooner Gulnaire and
- 6 the St. Lawrence being on the run between Kingston and Montreal. He was also in the steamer New Era
- 7 making a round trip once a week between Kingston, Ottawa, and Montreal. In 1891 he was appointed
- 8 at the Captain's pretty home on Rideau street in Kingston. He is a life member of the A. F. and A M.
- 9 born on November 17, 1856 in Barriefield, near Kingston, Ontario, his father being Mr. Thomas Esford, blacksmith,
- 10 he began an apprenticeship to a cordwainer in Kingston. Not caring for that business, however, he
- 11 with honors in the Royal Military College of Kingston when he was eighteen years of age.
- 12 and youngest sister of Capt. George Batten, of Kingston. Half a dozen children have been born to Mr. and
- 13 of Hulls, who is a son of the late John Evans of Kingston, was born in Kingston in 1849. and was educated
- 14 daughter of the late Capt. John Trowell, of Kingston. For two years after his marriage he continued to
- 15 is unquestioned. He was born in the City of Kingston, Ontario, in the year 1842. His father, Col. John Graves,
- 16 here, was educated in the Public Schools at Kingston, Ontario, where he took a high place in his classes, along
- 17 Isabella Cook, daughter of Mr. John Cook, of Kingston. They live in a handsome residence at 10 Wilton
- 18 barge W. B. Hall trading between Port Arthur and Kingston
- 19 staves from the north shore of Lake Erie to Kingston and Garden Island, where they were rafted for
- 20 of the gate at Centre Island. He was born in Kingston on May 24. 1855, and in that city he received
- 21 from Montreal they had occasion to stop over in Kingston, and from there Michael shipped on the schooner
- 22 with Messrs. Davis & Doran, marine engineers, of Kingston, in 1863 he began steamboating as engineer of the
- 23 steamer St. Magnus in 1891, on the run between Kingston, Chicago and Port Arthur. Then in 1892 he became
- 24 that morning," he said, "having come up from Kingston as a passenger on the steamer Sovereign the
- 25 Lord Nelson, a vessel which was burnt at Kingston a few years later. After that the Captain went
- 26 from Chicago to Buffalo and down the lakes to Kingston. During the seasons of 1874 and 1875 he sailed as
- 27 Pierrepont and Gazelle, which ran between Kingston and Wolfe Island. From these boats he went on to
- 28 and mate. Captain Quinn and Miss Mullins of Kingston were married on December 23, in the year 1884,
- 29 and in the Public Schools of that county and Kingston he received a good education. The captain's
- 30 sire eventually, in 1834, married Miss Smith, of Kingston and settled on a farm, in the vicinity of
- 31 Paterson, widow of the late Robert Paterson, of Kingston, Ontario, and she married Captain Soloman in 1867.
- 32 daughter Mrs. James Minnes on Bagot street in Kingston.
- 33 Born at Kingston in October, 1857, Capt. John V. Trowell received
- 34 her, and he was forced to run down the lake to Kingston for shelter. That was a terrible night. Everyone
- 35 she was driven ashore at Snake Island, near Kingston. She was released without any loss, except that a
- 36 off Genesee whilst bound from Chicago to Kingston with a load of grain. Terrible gales succeeded
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