Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Sir Charles Hibbert Tupper KCMG PC (August 3, 1855 – March 30, 1927) was a Canadian lawyer and politician.

  2. Sir Charles Tupper, 1st Baronet GCMG, CB, PC, M.D. [1] (July 2, 1821 – October 30, 1915) was a Canadian Father of Confederation who served as the sixth prime minister of Canada from May 1 to July 8, 1896. As the premier of Nova Scotia from 1864 to 1867, he led Nova Scotia into Confederation.

  3. 13 de feb. de 2008 · Sir Charles Hibbert Tupper, politician, cabinet minister (born 3 August 1855 in Amherst, Nova Scotia; died 30 March 1927 in Vancouver, BC).

  4. The following essay charts Sir Hibbert Tuppers role in BC provincial politics from the early 1900s to the 1920s and explores how his outsider status in British Columbia illuminates key aspects of this province’s political culture in the early years of the twentieth century.

  5. 28 de jun. de 2024 · Sir Charles Tupper, 1st Baronet was the premier of Nova Scotia from 1864 to 1867 and prime minister of Canada in 1896, who was responsible for the legislation that made Nova Scotia a province of Canada in 1867. As Canada’s minister of railways and canals (1879–84), Tupper introduced the bill giving.

  6. Sir Charles Hibbert Tupper had the Tupper courage, the Tupper eloquence, and the family concern for the glory of Tupperdom. He was energetic, talented, quick to seize a point, and almost as quick to take offence.

  7. In 1863 he was elected president of the Medical Society of Nova Scotia and in 186770 he served as first president of the Canadian Medical Association. He transferred his practice to Ottawa in 1868, and during the period in opposition after 1873 he practised there and in Toronto.