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・ Edward Carleton Tufnell
・ Edward Carlson
・ Edward Carlyon Eliot
・ Edward Carpenter
・ Edward Carpenter (priest)
・ Edward Carr
・ Edward Carrere
・ Edward Carrick
・ Edward Carrington
・ Edward Carrington Cabell
・ Edward Carrington Venable
・ Edward Carroll (musician)
・ Edward Carson
・ Edward Carson (Conservative politician)
・ Edward Carter
Edward Carter (Canadian politician)
・ Edward Carter Preston
・ Edward Carteret
・ Edward Caruana Dingli
・ Edward Cashman
・ Edward Cassidy
・ Edward Casso
・ Edward Cast
・ Edward Castle, Baron Castle
・ Edward Castres Gwynne
・ Edward Castronova
・ Edward Caswall
・ Edward Catich
・ Edward Cator Seaton
・ Edward Causton


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Edward Carter (Canadian politician) : ウィキペディア英語版
Edward Carter (Canadian politician)

Edward Carter (1 March 1822 – 27 September 1883) was a member of the Canadian House of Commons for the Brome electoral district in Quebec. He also represented Montréal-Centre in the Legislative Assembly of Quebec from 1867 to 1871. His name appears as Edward Brock Carter in some sources.
Born in Trois-Rivières, Lower Canada (now Quebec), the son of George Carter and Mary Ann Short, he was educated in Trois-Rivières and at the Collège de Nicolet. He worked as a manager in a commercial establishment from 1838 to 1840, then articled in law with Edward Short, Thomas Cushing Aylwin, F.W. Primrose and John Rose, was called to the Lower Canada bar in 1845 and set up practice in Montreal. Carter was crown clerk and associate clerk of the peace for Montreal district from 1862 to 1866. In 1862, he was named Queen's Counsel. Carter was an associate professor of criminal law and later professor emeritus at McGill University. He published ''A Treatise on the Law and Practice on Summary Convictions and Orders by Justices of the Peace in Upper and Lower Canada'' in 1856.
Carter was defeated in Montréal-Centre and in Châteauguay when he ran for reelection to the Quebec assembly in 1871.〔 He served in the 1st Canadian Parliament for the Conservative party from 17 November 1871, replacing Christopher Dunkin. He was re-elected in the 1872 federal election and left politics after serving his full term in the 2nd Canadian Parliament.
He was a governor for Bishop's College and served as solicitor for the Montreal diocese of the Anglican church. In 1850, he married Mary Jane Kerr. Carter died in Montreal at the age of 61.〔
==References==

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