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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Zoé_LaurierZoé Laurier - Wikipedia

    Zoé Laurier. Zoé, Lady Laurier ( née Lafontaine; June 26, 1841 – November 1, 1921), was the wife of Sir Wilfrid Laurier, the seventh Prime Minister of Canada . Biography. Portrait of Miss Zoë Lafontaine. Madame Zoë Laurier, April 1878. By William James Topley in Ottawa. Portrait of Lady Laurier.

  2. Zoé, the Love of His Life. Wilfrid Laurier met Zoé Lafontaine while studying and living at the home of Dr. Gauthier in Montréal. She was a boarder and gave piano lessons to the doctor’s children to help her family financially.

  3. Zoé, Lady Laurier. Wilfrid Laurier married Zoé Lafontaine in Montreal on May 13, 1868. She was the daughter of G.N.R. Lafontaine and his first wife, Zoé Tessier known as Zoé Lavigne. Laurier's wife Zoé was born in Montreal and educated there at the School of the Bon Pasteur, and at the Convent of the Sisters of the Sacred Heart ...

  4. 10 de nov. de 2016 · He had married Zoé Lafontaine in 1868, whom he had met in Montreal. But around 1874, he met Émilie Barthe, who became the wife of his associate Joseph Lavergne. Although Zoé was a good wife for Laurier, she didn’t have—how would I put it?—the stature of Émilie.

  5. Laurier, Zoé (1841–1921) Canadian first lady. Name variations: Zoe Laurier, Lady Laurier. Born Zoé Lafontaine, June 26, 1841 (some sources cite 1842), in Montreal, Quebec, Canada; died Nov 1, 1921, in Ottawa; m. Wilfrid Laurier (prime minister of Canada, 1896–1911), May 13, 1868 (died Feb 17, 1919); children: none.

  6. 17 de nov. de 2016 · I portray this in Laurier in Love, in a fictional way but something like this did happen. She moved to Ottawa along with her husband because her husband, Joseph Lavergne, had been an MP in Laurier’s party during the previous term. After the victory of 1896, she moved along with Joseph to Ottawa. Zoé Laurier also moved from Arthabaska.

  7. When Zoé Laurier died in 1921, it was discovered that she had bequeathed her Ottawa home to William Lyon Mackenzie King, her husband's successor as leader of the Liberal party. Her stated reason for the bequest was that "this house having been given us [Sir Wilfrid and herself] by political friends of my husband, I am of the opinion that it ...