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Authority record
n 80158901 · Person · 1849-1906

Honoré Beaugrand (baptized Marie-Louis-Honoré) was born on March 24, in St. Joseph de Lanoraie, Quebec.

He was a French-Canadian journalist, politician, author, and folklorist. He took a short course at the School of Military Instruction of Montreal. At the age of 17, he left Canada and he did not return until 13 years later. He went first to Mexico, where he fought in the Emperor Maximilian’s army. When the war ended in 1867, he followed the troops to France. He then lived in the United States and Mexico, working at various trades. By 1871 he was in Fall River, Massachusetts where he became a leading figure among the immigrants from Quebec, launching a Franco-American cause newspaper L’Écho du Canada. He returned to Montreal and launched first a satirical weekly, Le Farceur, and then, in 1879, La Patrie, a liberal daily that would remain in his hands until 1897. For the next 10 or 12 years, he concentrated on politics and on managing his newspaper. He was twice elected mayor of Montreal (1885–87). He spent the last 15 years of his life travelling (Mediterranean basin, the American southwest, and the Far East) and writing. He is most famous in Quebec for writing down the legend of the "Chasse-galerie", published in 1891 in "La chasse galerie: légendes canadiennes". Today, a street in Montreal and the Honoré-Beaugrand metro station are named in his honour.

He died on October 7, 1906, in Montreal, Quebec.

Person · 1930-2020

Donald J. Beauprie was born on February 16, 1930, in Montreal and died on April 24, 2020, in Ottawa. His parents were Lennox Beauprie and Ruth Howell. In 1964, he married Jean MacGregor, and they had three children. Beauprie graduated from McGill University in Dentistry in 1956 and practiced preventative dentistry for thirty-nine years. He published a book called Destination Algonquin Park: Tracks to Cache Lake and the Highland Inn. The fonds consists of material related Beauprie's life as a student and alumnus of McGill's Faculty of Dentistry. The records include receipts, correspondence and newspaper clippings related to dentistry (1954-1957); McGill memorabilia and ephemera; correspondence; articles and publications (issues of McGill Daily, Dawson Weekly, McGill News, McGill Dental Review); photographs; and objects (Scarlett Key Crest and Sweater, McGill University Crest, Dawson College T-Shirt, McGill Student Society Award Mug (1955-56), and a McGill Freshie button).

Beaux Arts Trio
https://lccn.loc.gov/n82056917 · Corporate body · 1955-