Abbott, John, a colleague of Sir John Macdonald: subscribes to Annexation manifesto, [27]; prime minister, [142].
Aberdeen, Lord, governor-general, [149].
Allan, Sir Hugh, and the Pacific Scandal, [97] and note, [99], [101].
Annexation manifesto of 1849, some subscribers to, [27].
Archibald, Adams, a colleague of Sir John Macdonald, [79]; lieutenant-governor of Manitoba, [91].
Argyll, Duke of, and Sir John Macdonald, [116-17].
Assembly. See Parliament.
'Baldwin Reformers,' their union with the Conservatives, [38], [39], [46].
Baldwin, Robert, with LaFontaine in power, [20], [28]; burned in effigy, [22]; defends the Liberal-Conservative alliance, [39], [46]; the Common School Act, [55]; retires from public life, [20], [31].
Beaconsfield, Lord, and Sir John Macdonald, [175-6]. See Disraeli.