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Death Other John Saunders: politics: 1754: 1834: Chief Justice on N.B. Supreme Court John Babbitt: science: 1845: 1889: built the first working phonograph in New Brunswick Rebecca Agatha Armour: literature: 1845: 1891: novelist and schoolteacher who lived almost her whole life in the town Julia O. Henson: activism: 1852: 1922
People from Fredericton; Name Famous for Birth Death Other John Saunders: politics: 1754: 1834: Chief Justice on N.B. Supreme Court John Babbitt: science: 1845: 1889: built the first working phonograph in New Brunswick Rebecca Agatha Armour: literature: 1845: 1891: novelist and schoolteacher who lived almost her whole life in the town Julia O ...
George Everett Chalmers (June 5, 1905 – April 26, 1993 [1]) was a medical doctor, surgeon and political figure in New Brunswick, Canada.He represented the ridings of York County, City of Fredericton and Fredericton South in the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick from 1963 to 1978 as a Progressive Conservative member.
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Eilish Cleary (October 22, 1963 – March 22, 2024) was an Irish-born Canadian physician, health officer, and public health advocate who served as the Chief Medical Officer of Health in New Brunswick from 2007 until her termination in 2015, following a controversial decision by the provincial government.
The following is a list of notable deaths in August 2017.. Entries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence:
Esther Clark married Conrad Payling Wright on July 31, 1924, on a farm outside of Fredericton, New Brunswick. She lectured on sociology at Acadia University from 1943 to 1947. [3] Esther began her writing career as a young woman with Public Opinion (1916) and The Challenge to Canadian Womanhood (1918), her first published works. She eventually ...
Christianity portal; Claude Weston Miller (26 June 1944 – 27 June 2023) was the ninth Anglican bishop (later archbishop) of Fredericton [1] and Metropolitan of Canada. [2] He retired on 26 June 2014 upon reaching his 70th birthday, and accepted the exceptional appointment as Episcopal Administrator until his successor, David Edwards, was consecrated as Bishop on 20 September 2014.