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Agnes Campbell Macphail (March 24, 1890 – February 13, 1954) [1] was a Canadian politician and the first woman elected to Canada's House of Commons. She served as a Member of Parliament (MP) from 1921 to 1940; from 1943 to 1945 and again from 1948 to 1951, she served as a member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, representing the Toronto riding of York East.
McFall, McFaul and McPhails records are found clustered in Ulster especially around Antrim and Derry.They appear to date from the British Plantation period. These variants are in church registers of County Antrim. As an example, on 29 August 1824, Sarah Jane, daughter of William McFaul, was christened at Ballymena in that county. [55]
Harriston (population 1,797 [1]) is a community in the Town of Minto in Wellington County, Ontario, Canada. In 1999, Harriston was amalgamated with the communities of Palmerston, Clifford, and Minto Township to form the Town of Minto. Harriston is located at the headwaters of the Maitland River, and has several shops, restaurants, a library, an ...
Quebec and Ontario [21] 73-200 1911 Great Porcupine Fire: Forest fire: Porcupine, Ontario 70 1903 Frank Slide: Rockslide: Frank, Crowsnest Pass, North-West Territories (Modern day Alberta) 65 1917 Dominion No. 12 Colliery explosion Explosion New Waterford, Nova Scotia [22] 64 1966 Canadian Pacific Airlines Flight 402: Plane crash: Tokyo, Japan
Alexander James McPhail (December 23, 1883 – October 21, 1931) was a Scottish-Canadian [1] agricultural reformer, and the first elected president of the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool. The Canadian government designated him a Person of National Historic Significance in 1971.
Mount Forest is a community in Wellington County, Ontario, Canada. It is located at the junction of Highway 6 and Highway 89 and is a part of the township of Wellington North, Ontario, Canada. As of the 2021 Canadian census the population of Mount Forest was 5,040. [1] [2]
Mount McPhail is a mountain located in the Elk Range of the Park Ranges of the Canadian Rockies and stands astride the British Columbia-Alberta border, which follows the Continental Divide in this area. The mountain was named in 1918 after Norman R. McPhail, a Canadian soldier who was killed in action during World War I. [1] [2] [3]
King's Highway 89, commonly referred to as Highway 89, is an east–west provincially maintained highway in the south central portion of the Canadian province of Ontario, stretching 107 kilometres (66 mi) from the junction of Highway 9 and Highway 23 in Harriston in the west, to Highway 400 just east of Cookstown in the east.