| Canadian Heritage Gallery | |||
| People | Click on the thumbnail to view the image, and for information about ordering reproductions. | ||
| Mackenzie, William Lyon | |||
| William
Lyon Mackenzie Aligned with the Reform side in Upper Canada, William Lyon
Mackenzie (1795-1861) raised a local Upper Canadian Rebellion outside Toronto in
1837. ID #20697 |
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| Mackenzie, Sir William | |||
| William
Mackenzie Sir William Mackenzie (1849-1923), creator of the Canadian Northern
Railway and investor in municipal rail lines. ID #20798 |
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| Macphail, Agnes | |||
| Two
C.C.F. Members Agnes Macphail and Eamon Parks, two newly elected members of
the
Ontario C.C.F., 1943. ID #20202 |
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| Maitland, Peregrine | |||
| Peregrine
Maitland Sir Peregrine Maitland (1777-1854), Lieutenant-Governor of Upper Canada
from 1818-1828. ID #20094 |
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| Mance, Jeanne | |||
| Jeanne
Mance A stained-glass window depicting Jeanne Mance, the creator of Hotel-Dieu,
the first hospital in Canada, and who worked throughout Quebec in the mid 18th
century. ID #10126 |
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| Manion, R.J. | |||
| Robert
Manion Robert Manion, the unsuccessful Conservative challenger to Prime Minister
King in the election of 1940. ID #20933 |
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| Mann, Donald | |||
| Donald
Mann Sir Donald Mann (1853-1934), railway builder and entrepreneur who shared in
the rapid growth of the young Canadian Northern. ID #20152 |
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| Manning | |||
| Ernest
Manning Ernest Manning, born in 1908, became Social Credit premier of Alberta in
1943 and held power for 25 years, with a careful mixture of financial conservatism and
social reformism, here seen at the left of the map. ID #20975 |
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| Marchand, Jean | |||
| Jean
Marchand Jean Marchand, a strongly pro-federal union head in Quebec, was elected
to Ottawa in 1965, named to the Senate in 1976 and became its Speaker in 1980. ID #21029 |
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| Click on the thumbnail to view the image, and for information about ordering reproductions. | |||
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