LIST OF PHOTOGRAVURES
Askwith, Jno. E, Ottawa. | |||
Baillie, Sir Frank W., Toronto. | |||
Baskerville, W. J., Ottawa. | |||
Beach, the late M. F. | |||
Beaumont, E. J., Kitchener. | |||
Birkett, Thomas, Ottawa. | |||
Blondin, Hon. P. E., Ottawa. | |||
Borden, Right. Hon. Sir R. L., Ottawa. | |||
Bowman, Charles M., Southampton. | |||
Breadner, R. W., Ottawa. | |||
Breithaupt, J. C., Kitchener. | |||
Breithaupt, L. J., Kitchener. | |||
Brennan, J. C., Ottawa. | |||
Bristow, M. G., Ottawa. | |||
Bulman, W., Winnipeg. | |||
Butterworth, J. G. B., Ottawa. | |||
Cowan, the late W. F., Ottawa. | |||
Currie, Major-General Sir Arthur William, Victoria, B.C. | |||
Dwyer, W. H., Ottawa. | |||
Edwards, Senator W. C., Ottawa. | |||
Englehart, Jacob L., Petrolia, Ontario. | |||
Finnie, D. M., Ottawa. | |||
Gale, R. H., Vancouver, B.C. | |||
Gariepy, Hon. Wilfrid, Edmonton. | |||
Garland, John L., Ottawa. | |||
Gibson, Brig.-General Sir John M., Hamilton. | |||
Gouin, Sir Lomer, Quebec. | |||
Graham, Hon. Geo. P., Brockville. | |||
Grant, Gordon, Ottawa. | |||
Harris, W. G., Toronto. | |||
Hebert, Zepherin, Montreal. | |||
Henry, D. E., Ottawa. | |||
Hodgetts, Colonel C. A., Ottawa. | |||
Hunter, Major W. E. Lincoln, Toronto. | |||
Hutchison, Colonel Wm., Ottawa. | |||
Kennedy, W. C., Windsor. | |||
King, Hon. W. L. Mackenzie, Ottawa. | |||
Laurier, the late Right Hon. Sir Wilfrid | |||
Macaulay, T. B., Montreal. | |||
Machin, Colonel H. A. C., Kenora. | |||
Mackenzie, John Angus, Ottawa. | |||
McClennaghan, Stewart, Ottawa. | |||
McInenly, William, Ottawa. | |||
McMahon, E., Ottawa. | |||
Mitchell, Hon. W. G., Quebec. | |||
Parsons, S. R., Toronto. | |||
Paton, Hugh, Montreal. | |||
Peuchen, Lieut.-Colonel Arthur, Toronto. | |||
Reid, W. B., Toronto. | |||
Robertson, E. Blake, Ottawa. | |||
Shillington, Colonel A. T., Ottawa. | |||
Shortly, Orville B., Toronto. | |||
Sifton, Hon. Arthur L., Ottawa. | |||
Stapells, R. A., Toronto. | |||
Sutherland, F. C., Toronto. | |||
Turgeon, Hon. Adelard, Quebec. | |||
Vaughan, Marshall, Welland, Ontario. | |||
White, Right. Hon. Sir W. T., Ottawa. | |||
Whitney, E. C., Ottawa. | |||
Woods, Lieut.-Colonel James W., Ottawa. | |||
Wright, George, Toronto. | |||
A CYCLOPÆDIA
of
CANADIAN BIOGRAPHY
Borden, Rt. Hon. Sir Robert Laird, P.C., K.C.M.G., K.C., LL.D., Premier of Canada (Ottawa, Ont.), eldest son of Andrew Borden and Eunice Laird, was born at Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, on June 26, 1854. He was educated at Acadia Villa Academy, Horton, and for a time a Professor in Glenwood Institute, N.J. His great-great-grandfather went to King’s County, Nova Scotia, with early settlers from New England, in 1760, and upon returning to Massachusetts gave his land in Nova Scotia to his son, the great-grandfather of the subject of this sketch. Upon returning to Nova Scotia, Sir Robert studied law and was called to the Bar in 1878. He first practised at Kentville, N.S., and later moved to Halifax, succeeding the late Sir John Thompson, then Prime Minister of Canada, in the firm of Thompson, Graham and Tupper. Before removing to Ottawa he was head of the law firm of Borden, Ritchie & Chisholm, of Halifax, and for ten years was President of the Nova Scotia Barristers’ Society. He was made a Q.C. in 1900; an Honorary LL.D. of Queen’s University in 1903; an Honorary LL.D., St. Francis Xavier University in 1905; an Honorary LL.D. of McGill University in 1913. In 1896 he was elected to the House of Commons from Halifax in the General Elections, and re-elected in 1900, but was an unsuccessful candidate at the General Elections in 1904. Upon the retirement of Edward Kidd, M.P., for Carleton, Ont., he was elected by acclamation in his stead at the by-election held on February 4, 1905, and was re-elected by a large majority at the general elections in 1908, when he was also elected in Halifax, N.S. He later resigned his Carleton seat, preferring to represent Halifax. At the General Elections of 1911, he was again returned for Halifax, and continued to represent that constituency up to the present time (1918). On February 6, 1901, he was chosen leader of