John mcdougall birthdate
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Fall Lecture Series: JOHN McDOUGALL (1842-1917) Native Son of Owen Sound
Donald B. Smith presents: John McDougall, Native Son of Owen Sound: A Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of His Death.
In the late summer and fall of 1886 Rev. John McDougall, born and raised in Owen Sound, accompanied three Alberta First Nations leaders to Central Canada. Numerous Methodist (United Church) congregations funded the trip, a reward for loyalty during the troubles of 1885. The Alberta group arrived by railway to Port Arthur, then by steamer to Owen Sound. A power point presentation reviews John McDougall’s early life in Ontario and the West to the 1886 visit of the “Loyal Methodist Chiefs”. The presentation ends with a hundred year film that shows Rev. McDougall interpreting at the 1916 adoption ceremony of the Duke of Connaught, Governor General of Canada, as a Stoney Nakoda Chief.
Donald B. Smith (1946-) is a professor emeritus of History at the University of Calgary. He ob
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McDOUGALL, JOHN CHANTLER, Methodist clergyman and author; b. 27 Dec. 1842 in Sydenham (Owen Sound), Upper Canada, son of George Millward McDougall*, a farmer who was to become a Methodist missionary, and Elizabeth Chantler; m. first in the spring of 1865 Abigail Steinhauer at the Whitefish Lake uppdrag (Alta), and they had three daughters; m. secondly 22 Sept. 1872 Elizabeth Ann Boyd in Cape rik (St Vincent Township), Ont., and they had six children; d. 15 Jan. 1917 in Calgary.
As a child, John McDougall attended various mission schools, and he learned to speak Ojibwa at an early age. In 1857–58 and 1859–60 he studied at Victoria College, Cobourg, but he left to accompany his father to a new hållplats in 1860. George McDougall had been made superintendent of western missions for the Wesleyan Methodist Church in Canada and was posted to the Rossville uppdrag, near Norway House (Man.). There John became fluent in Cree, taught school, and ass
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John A. McDougall
American physician and author (1947–2024)
This article is about the American physician and author. For other people with the name, see John McDougall (disambiguation).
John A. McDougall (May 17, 1947 – June 22, 2024) was an American physician and author. He wrote a number of diet books advocating the consumption of a low-fatvegan diet based on starchy foods and vegetables.
His eponymous diet, called The McDougall Plan was a New York Times bestseller.[1] It has been categorized as a low-fat fad diet.[2] The diet rejects all animal products as well as cooking oils, processed food, alcoholic beverages and caffeinated drinks. As with any restrictive low-fat diet, it may lead to flatulence, possibly poor mineral absorption from excess fiber, and limited food choices that may lead to a feeling of deprivation.[2]
Background
At the age of 18 McDougall had a stroke, the experience led him to study medicine.[3] McDougall