A Cyclopaedia of Canadian Biography: Being Chiefly Men of the Time by Rose
1859. His parents were Theophile Chênevert and Mathilde Filteau. His
978 words | Chapter 171
father was for many years one of the largest merchants of the county of
Berthier, and died in January, 1873. Young Chênevert studied at the
College of L’Assomption and the College of Ste. Marie, at Montreal. On
the 12th of January, 1880, he was admitted to the study of law, and
followed the course of Laval University, at Montreal, attending at the
same time the office of Longpré & David, advocates. He was called to the
bar of Quebec on the 20th of January, 1883, and began to practise his
profession at Berthierville, in partnership with the Hon. Honoré
Mercier, prime minister of the province of Quebec, and C. Beausoleil,
now member for Berthier, under the name and style of Mercier, Beausoleil
& Chênevert. But he practises his profession alone at Berthierville,
attending the circuits of Richelieu, Berthier, and Joliette. Mr.
Chênevert is a Liberal in politics, and has been in several contests. He
was a member and officer of the National Club at Montreal, and took an
active part in its management. In 1881 he delivered a very interesting
lecture before the members of this club, and _La Patrie_, on the 13th
March of that year, thus flatteringly alludes to it:—“At the last
meeting of the National Club, which was numerously attended, one of the
members, Mr. Cuthbert Chênevert, delivered a very instructive lecture,
prepared at the request of the secretary, entitled ‘The History of the
Press.’ The work is worthy of the title. It unites in the recital
didactic language, strict history and pure literature. The invention of
printing, the first attempts of Gutenberg, were related in a most
interesting manner, and the encomiums passed on Canada were to the
effect that our newspapers were the defenders of our liberties against
oligarchy and bureaucracy. This magnificent lecture was marked with
patriotic sentiments, expressed with great force. We congratulate Mr.
Chênevert on his success. His example should encourage his friends,
being one of the youngest members of the club. We hope this effort will
not be his last.” Mr. Chênevert was married, on August 27, 1884, to
Valerie Berthe Rocher, daughter of Clothilde Roy and Barthelemy Rocher,
notary and registrar of the county of L’Assomption.
* * * * *
=Robinson, D. A.=, M.D., Coaticook, Quebec, was born at West Charleston,
Vermont, U.S.A., Feb. 29th, 1836. He was the eldest son of Dr. Elijah
Robinson and Ann Eliza Smith, whose ancestry were of purely English
origin and among the early settlers of the state of Connecticut. The
great-grandfather on the father’s side was a colonel in the
Revolutionary war of the American colonies against Great Britain, and
the great-grandfather on the mother’s side, with several brothers, held
positions of honor and trust in the Federal army. Dr. Robinson’s early
education was confined mostly to the common schools. His classical
course, preparatory to his entering upon the study of medicine, was
through select schools and private teachers. His strictly medical course
was commenced under the direction of his father, then a prominent and
leading practitioner in the county in which he lived. His first course
of medical lectures commenced at Dartmouth Medical College, Hanover,
N.H., in the summer of 1858. He subsequently graduated among the first
of his class at the Vermont University Medical College, Burlington, Vt.,
June, 1859, and commenced the practice of medicine at Milan, N.H., the
following year. His successful career as a practitioner led to his
appointment as surgeon in the United States army, and during the great
American rebellion was with the Union army under Gen. Grant, and served
with it till the surrender of the Confederate Gen. Lee and the close of
the war. He recommenced civil practice at Island Pond, Vt., soon after
his services ended as army surgeon in 1866, and conducted a successful
practice in this town till the year 1874, when he moved to the
prosperous and thriving town of Coaticook, P.Q. Two years subsequently
he was made a member of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of the
Province of Quebec, after having undergone a searching examination
before the Provincial Medical Board in Montreal, by whom every applicant
but himself was rejected, which reflected considerable honor on his
ability and proficiency as a medical man. Aside from the position he now
occupies in the medical profession of his adopted country, he is a
member of the Vermont State Medical Society, and various other
societies. Dr. Robinson is now in successful practice in Coaticook.
* * * * *
=Foster, Hon. George Eulas=, B.A., D.C.L., Ottawa, Minister of Marine
and Fisheries of the Dominion of Canada, M.P. for King’s, New Brunswick,
was born in Carleton county, N.B., on the 3rd September, 1847. His
father, John Foster, was a descendant of a United Empire loyalist who
settled in New Brunswick in 1783. His mother, Margaret Haney, was
descended on her father’s side from German stock. George, the future
statesman, received his primary education in the common and superior
schools of his native county, and in September, 1865, entered the
University of New Brunswick, at the head of the matriculating class, and
was the winner in strong competition, of the King’s county scholarship
in the same university. He also took, during his first year, the Douglas
gold medal for an English essay, in a competition open to all the
classes, and won the compound achromatic microscope, as a first prize,
for natural science. His strong points at college were mathematics and
classics, with a strong liking for English literature and history. He
graduated B.A., in 1868; taught the Grammar School at Grand Falls, N.B.;
became superior of the school at Fredericton Junction, and in the
Baptist Seminary at Fredericton, one year at each. He became principal
of the Ladies’ High School at Fredericton in 1870, and was appointed
professor of classics and history in the University of New Brunswick, in
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