Hector Fabre
honourable the Hector Fabre (born on August 9th 1834, deceased on September 2nd 1910) was a journalist, a senator, writer and diplomatic Canadian.
Born with Montreal, he studies with the Collège of the Assumption, the seminar of Saint-Hyacinthe and the small seminar of Montreal. Entered in the Bar of Quebec in 1856, it collaborates in several newspapers, fact of the policy and becomes senator in earlier 1875 after having undergone a defeat at the polls two years. It sits in the senatorial division of Lasalle as a nationalist.
In 1882, it is named general police chief of Canada with Paris, city where it dies in 1910. Having contributed to renew the relations between France and Quebec, it inspired the creation of the General delegation from Quebec in Paris in 1961.
Works published
- biographical Draft on Knight of Lorimier , 1856
- the St-Jean-Baptist in Quebec , 1865
- Confederation, independence, annexation , 1871
- Why I was beaten , 1873
- Chroniques , 1877
- Société of the colonial and maritime studies , 1884
Reviews and newspapers
- the Order
- the Canadian
- the Event
- Paris-Canada , founder
Honors
- Hector-Fabre Pulpit of UQAM
- Member of the royal Company of Canada, 1882
- Order of Saint-Michel and Saint-Georges, 1886
- Knight of the Legion of honor, 1887
External bond
-
federal political Experiment — Library of the Parliament
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