• Thumbnail for Charles Tupper
    fellow Baptist and family friend of the Tuppers, encouraged Charles Tupper to enter politics. In 1855 Tupper ran against the prominent Liberal politician...
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  • Tupper may refer to: Anselm Tupper (1763–1808), Continental Army officer, pioneer to the Ohio Country, son of Benjamin Tupper Archelaus Tupper (died 1781)...
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  • Thumbnail for Charles Hibbert Tupper
    Sir Charles Hibbert Tupper KCMG PC (August 3, 1855 – March 30, 1927) was a Canadian lawyer and politician. Tupper was the second son of Sir Charles Tupper...
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  • Thumbnail for Frances Tupper
    Frances Amélia Tupper, Lady Tupper (née Morse; March 14, 1826 – May 11, 1912) was the wife of Sir Charles Tupper, the sixth Prime Minister of Canada....
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  • Charles Tupper (1821–1915) served as the sixth prime minister of Canada. Other people with the name include: Charles F. Tupper (1852–1929), American lawyer...
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  • Thumbnail for Sir Charles Tupper Secondary School
    Safety. Today Tupper serves grades 8 through 12. On September 29, 2009, the school celebrated its 50th anniversary, with hosts Friends of Tupper Fund. Established...
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  • Thumbnail for Sir Charles Tupper Building
    The Sir Charles Tupper Building on its completion in 1960 served as the headquarters of the Department of Public Works, known by its applied title as Public...
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  • Charles Frederick Tupper Jr. (born 1942) is an American former politician. Tupper, a Democrat from El Paso, Texas, served two consecutive terms on the...
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  • Thumbnail for List of books about prime ministers of Canada
    in Relation to the Interests of the Empire" (1866) Charles Tupper, Letter from the Hon. Dr. Tupper, C.B., to the Hon. James McDonald, M.P.P. (1872) The...
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  • Thumbnail for Tupper baronets
    Hibbert Tupper (1893–1972) Charles Gordon Hibbert Tupper (1918–1996) (1) Charles Reginald Hibbert Tupper (b. 1947) David Wilson Hibbert Tupper (1921–1999)...
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  • Thumbnail for Mackenzie Bowell
    was then effectively held by Charles Tupper, who had joined Cabinet at the same time, filling the seventh place. Tupper, who had been Canadian High Commissioner...
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  • Thumbnail for 1896 Canadian federal election
    functionally taken over by Sir Charles Tupper, a Father of Confederation and former Premier of Nova Scotia. Earlier, in February 1896, Tupper introduced remedial...
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  • Thumbnail for List of prime ministers of Canada by time in office
    Right Hon. Sir Charles Tupper, P.C., K.C.M.G., G.C.M.G., C.B. Hutchinson, pp. 109–11. Dictionary of Canadian Biography: "Tupper, Sir Charles". Forsey, Eugene...
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  • Thumbnail for William Johnston Tupper
    was named a King's Counsel in 1912. Tupper also served as president of the Army and Navy Veterans in Canada. Tupper entered political life in the 1914...
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  • Thumbnail for Minister of Finance (Canada)
    uncommon for former ministers of finance to later become prime minister. Charles Tupper, R. B. Bennett, John Turner, Jean Chrétien, and Paul Martin all became...
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  • Thumbnail for Wilfrid Laurier
    Catholic schools in 1890. Tupper faced Laurier in the 1896 federal election, in which the schools dispute was a key issue. While Tupper supported overriding...
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  • Thumbnail for 1900 Canadian federal election
    defeating the Conservative Party and Liberal-Conservatives led by Charles Tupper. Notes: * Party did not nominate candidates in the previous election...
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  • Sparrow David Thompson (1892–1894) Sir Mackenzie Bowell (1894–1896) Sir Charles Tupper (1896) Sir Robert Borden (1911–1920) Arthur Meighen (1920–1921, 1926)...
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  • Thumbnail for Robert Borden
    federal election, representing the Conservative Party. He replaced Charles Tupper as party leader in 1901, but was defeated in two federal elections by...
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  • Thumbnail for 7th Canadian Ministry
    Seventh Canadian Ministry was the cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Sir Charles Tupper. It governed Canada from 1 May to 8 July 1896. It was formed after the...
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  • Thumbnail for Prime Minister of Canada
    until their deaths; Wilfrid Laurier dying while still in the post; and Charles Tupper, Louis St. Laurent, and John Turner, each before they returned to private...
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  • Charles F. Tupper (November 8, 1852 – December 14, 1929) was an American lawyer, businessman, and politician from New York. Tupper was born in Kirkwood...
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  • Thumbnail for Jonathan McCully
    school in order to fund his legal studies. One of his pupils was Sir Charles Tupper. He was called to the Nova Scotia bar in 1837, and set up his practice...
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  • Thumbnail for John Turner
    Canadian history, ahead of only Sir Charles Tupper, who took office after dissolution of parliament. Turner, along with Tupper and later Kim Campbell, were the...
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  • series McQueen, as crown attorney Arnold Bateman in Wojeck, and as Charles Tupper, Minister of Railways, in The National Dream. Follows was born in Ottawa...
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  • Party of Nova Scotia, originated from the Confederation Party of Charles Tupper. Tupper united members of the pre-Confederation Conservative Party (who...
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  • bears his name, Tupperware Plastics Company. Tupper was born on a farm in Berlin, New Hampshire. The Tupper family moved from Berlin, New Hampshire when...
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  • Thompson. Canada's first and sixth prime ministers (John A. Macdonald and Charles Tupper) had also been co-premier and premier of British provinces that became...
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  • Thumbnail for Hiram Blanchard
    time. Although he supported the free schooling initiative of Premier Charles Tupper, Blanchard objected to the idea that schools should be governed by a...
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  • Thumbnail for Amherst, Nova Scotia
    Confederation: Edward B. Chandler, Robert B. Dickey, Jonathan McCully, and Sir Charles Tupper. During the late 19th century, local industrialists and entrepreneurs...
    28 KB (1,711 words) - 00:33, 20 October 2024