Matching Articles"Society" (Total 24)

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  • About Bethany United Church, a Registered Heritage Structure that was built by the residents of Petites circa 1859.
  • About Bleak House, a Registered Heritage Structure that was built around 1816 for a local merchant named John Slade.
  • About the Blundon house, a Registered Heritage Structure built in the late 1800s as a family residence.
  • About the Casey Store, a Registered Heritage Structure located in Conche and built in 1904 by Michael Casey Sr.
  • About Drogheda (Valley of Hope), a Registered Heritage Structure located near Clarke's Beach settled in the 1800s by the Coveyduck family.
  • A brief history of Evelly House, a Registered Heritage Structure located in Trinity East and built in 1885.
  • About the Fidelity Masonic Lodge in Grand Bank, a Registered Heritage Structure built by the Masons in 1905.
  • About Fogo United Church, a Registered Heritage Structure built in the 1800s. Most of the church burned in 1875 however it was rebuilt within two years.
  • A brief history of the George C. Harris House, a Registered Heritage Structure located in Grand Bank, and built in 1908.
  • A brief history of the Holy Trinity Anglican Church, Codroy, NL, a Registered Heritage Structure built in 1913.
  • About the J.B. Foote house, a Registered Heritage Structure built in 1908 in Grand Bank, NL.
  • About the Lawlor House, a Registered Heritage Structure located in Trinity East, NL and built in 1871.
  • About the Mary Boland house, a Registered Heritage Structure that was built in Calvert, NL in the early 1900s.
  • Positive and negative influences of British, French, and American military bases on Newfoundland and Labrador.
  • About the Morgan house, a Registered Heritage Structure located in Seal Cove, NL and built in the mid-19th century.
  • Roman Catholic presence and influence on Newfoundland society, and advancements in the Roman Catholic church.
  • Scottish immigrants to Newfoundland and Labrador worked predominantly in the fields of commerce and agriculture during the 19th century.
  • The Spanish flu did not originate in Newfoundland and Labrador, but the country's ports, and global trade relations made it vulnerable to the disease.
  • About the Spanish influenza pandemic that reached Newfoundland and Labrador in 1918 and killed more than 600 people in less than five months.
  • Background information about the community of St. Chad's, located on the Eastport Peninsula in Newfoundland.