Fort Qu'Appelle, between Echo and Mission Lakes, was originally a Hudson's Bay Company trading post; the original factor's buildings are maintained as a museum.
In the 1891 Northwest Territories election, he ran as an unsuccessful candidate for a seat to the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories for the riding of South Qu'Appelle.
The most ambitious such project, however, the Grand Trunk Railway's Chateau Qu'Appelle hotel at the corner of Albert Street and College Avenue (the site of the 1955 Museum of Natural History, now renamed the Royal Saskatchewan Museum), was abandoned, its building materials lying unused for years until they were eventually bought by the CPR and used in the construction of the Hotel Saskatchewan.
Access to the area was opened up by the Qu'Appelle, Long Lake and Saskatchewan Railroad and Steamboat Company who also operated steamships on the lake.
In Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan, the parish church of Saint Peter's was the pro-cathedral for the Anglican southern Saskatchewan diocese until 1944.
It consisted of a part of Saskatchewan lying south of the Qu'Appelle River and east of the 2nd meridian.
Having failed entrance exams to Oxford University, he moved in 1898 to Qu'Appelle, District of Assiniboia in the North-West Territories (most which became the southern third in territory, half of population, of the province of Saskatchewan, Canada in 1905 after his departure).
Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan | Fort Qu'Appelle | Qu'Appelle Valley | Qu'Appelle River | Qu'Appelle, | South Qu'Appelle | Qu'Appelle, Long Lake and Saskatchewan Railroad and Steamboat Company | Qu'Appelle | Je m'appelle Barbra | Fort Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan | Chateau Qu'Appelle | Appelle | Anglican Diocese of Qu'Appelle |
Thiollet, Jean-Pierre, Je m'appelle Byblos, H & D (2005), ISBN 2-914266-04-9.
On the other hand, during the time of Michael Peers as Dean, Bruce McLeod, then Moderator of the United Church of Canada, visited Regina and departed from predecessors by visiting St Paul's Cathedral rather than any local United Church and was widely commented upon by parishioners as having delivered the best sermon they had ever heard.
Qu'Appelle (Saskatchewan; corresponding to the pre-1905 District of Assiniboia in the North-West Territories),
In 1907 he completed the music for Marcel Gerbidon's operetta, "Flossie" or "Je m'appelle Flossie."
He apprenticed as a carpenter before coming west in 1884 to Fort Qu'Appelle and then Regina.
The effect can be demonstrated for many visual tasks and was named oblique effect in the widely cited article by Stuart Appelle.
A call went the Canadian Forces which dispatched the destroyer HMCS Qu'Appelle.