Brick Street Cemetery
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Matches 601 to 650 of 810

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
601 Norton/Gullen Gullen*, Elizabeth (I936)
 
602 not at BSC
5 children
twin of Thomas 
Dale, Hugh Fraser (I657)
 
603 not at BSC Nixon, Joseph (I280)
 
604 not at BSC (G. Curnoe) Odell, Myrtle (I602)
 
605 not at BSC?
farmed L35 C1 
Griffith, Mary Ann (I401)
 
606 not at BSC??
A prodding of the ground at Brick Street Cemetery next to Samuel Hungerford's grave by Bernie Gill and Glen Curnoe in October, 2008 would indicate that his wife Abigail(c1785-after 1861) is not buried beside him.
The Kilbourne family genealogists are unable to confirm Abigail's place of burial. They suspect that she could be in the abandoned graveyard which is on the former Kilbourne property where there are no surviving headstones. This was the Kilbourne family cemetery, which was probably established before the war of 1812. ie.Joseph Kilborne died in 1807.
Glen 
Kilbourn, Abigail (I564)
 
607 not buried at BSC Griffeth, Oliver (I509)
 
608 not buried at BSC but infant child is; William & Abigail are mentioned on the stone
1881 census: William Manning, 53, living with wife Abigail, children John (20) & Lucinda (15) 
Manning, William (I1008)
 
609 not included in the Brink Book
Jarvis 15 
Jarvis*, Betsy (I94)
 
610 O'Dell 1
-she was a widow when she married Eli [G. Curnoe email 25 Feb 2012] 
Westcott*, Emma (I601)
 
611 O'dell 1 Odell*, Eli (I600)
 
612 O'Dell 2 Odell*, Melvin L. (I609)
 
613 obit says came to Canada when age 15 (1829) and buried at BSC (but there's no marker) Curtis*+, Emmaline (I1355)
 
614 Odel 4 Odell*, John (I608)
 
615 Odell 1 Griffeth*, Annis (I470)
 
616 Odell 10 Odell*, Priscilla (I586)
 
617 Odell 11
Oliver Odell Died Feb 25 1870 Age 34 yrs Husband of Ann. Killed in a Refinery explosion [2010]
 
Odell*, Oliver (I487)
 
618 Odell 3 Odell*, Seraph Prissila (I476)
 
619 Odell 3 Odell*, Nathan (I587)
 
620 Odell 3 Odell*, Edwin Augustus (I591)
 
621 Odell 4
9 children 
Odell*, Lyman Oscar (I514)
 
622 Odell 4 Odell*, Eanor Louisa (I607)
 
623 Odell 4 Griffeth*, Jane (I203)
 
624 Odell 5
The inscription is very worn. The name is William I. Odell, but the BS and OGS records say only William Odell. OGS also says there is a footstone marked WLO which suggests William Loop Odell. The footstone, if it ever existed, cannot be found and the dates do not match those of William Loop Odell. This must be William I. Odell, son of Joseph and Sally, father of Cynthia through his first wife Cynthia 
Odell, William I. (I478)
 
625 Odell 6 Odell*, William A. Eddy (I492)
 
626 Odell 7
12 children
moved to Westminster from Quebec 1837
lived in London, died in Putnamville
[HCM p. 949]: The Odells are from an American family from Poughkeepsie, New York, and are of German origin. William Odell was born in Poughkeepsie, and came when a young man to Odelltown. He was married there, and became the father of these children: -- David, John H., James, William L., Frederick, Alfred, Adolphus, Johanna, Deborah, Sarah, Marietta and Amelia. In 1837, Mr. odell moved to Westminster Township, and settled where the Warrior Hotel now stands. Afterwards he resided in London, and then in Putnamville, where he died. He was a member of the Methodist Church, was a hard-working, industrious citizen, and in his early days was a man of considerable property. He was a man who was upright and honorable in every respect, and had the esteem of all who knew him. He died at the age of 64 years.
 
Odell*, William (I617)
 
627 Odell 8 Wilson*, Caroline (I618)
 
628 Odell/Manning Schriver*, Regina Enor (I484)
 
629 Odell/Nickels
"In memory of Eanor L. Ormsby daughter of John and Annis Odell died April 11, 1889 aged 59 years"
Eanor was first married to George Nickels. He died 1879. She remarried to Nicholas Ormsby. In 1881 she is married to Nicholas Ormsby. When she died in 1889 she was buried next to her first husband and their children.

1871 census: Eanor L. Nickels, 40, living London with husband George Nickels, 2 boys Richard & Samuel Underhill, possibly father-in-law George Nickels, 76 widow; Congregational; b. Ontario
1881 census: Eanor L. Ormsby, 60, living London with husband Nicholas and his 2 children; b. Ontario 
Odell*, Eanor Louisa (I588)
 
630 Odell/Percevil Percival*, Charlotte (I584)
 
631 of Chippewa Steinhoff, Elizabeth (I1123)
 
632 of Delaware
immigrated 1853, came to Westminster 1860s
it is suspected that Jeptha is the brother of John Foreman of Westminster 
Foreman, Jeptha (I1334)
 
633 of London Twp
daughter of a music teacher and UEL settler from Vermont;
Samantha was also a musician and inherited her father's piano. 
Hart, Samantha (I1669)
 
634 Of the other descendants of Frederick Mabee and Peter Teeple little or nothing of special note is known to the present writer, except the dates of their birth and death, and that Oliver Mabee Teeple was also a captain at Lundy's Lane;
[dubious - he would have been about 10 years old during the war!] 
Teeple, Oliver Mabee (I1654)
 
635 OGS says William F. first son of S.T. & Hannah Nichols d. 18 Aug 1859 aged 6 months & 21 ds; probably Shubal Nichols (son of Subal and Fanny)and Hannah Walters

stone very faint

Nichols 6
 
Nichols*, William F. (I1631)
 
636 on muster rolls for Oxford militia, War of 1812

[Glen Curnoe]
Warner Sylvenus Dygert Died on July 20, 1826, age 53 years.
Warner is buried with his son William who died on July 9, 1824, age 1yr and 5 months.
He and his son are buried in the North Street United Church Cemetery which is located on Highway #4 south of Lambeth
Warner Dygert was very active in the Oxford Militia during the War of 1812.
"It is reported that two young lads from Beachville, WILLIAM DODGE and WARNER DYGERT, hardly big enough to hold a musket, fought through the compaign and when the army disbanded, found their way home on foot, begging food and lodging on their way." [The Axe and the Wheel (book on the internet)]
 
Dygert, Warner Sylvanus (I1223)
 
637 ones like Elizabeth Dell Frank became a Universalist and she was from a
Quaker family in New Jersey. Hundreds of people came into the Niagara area
from that northern part of New Jersey including my mother's Dell ancestors
and my father's German Simmerman ones. Some of those people also went to
Westminster at time of the War of 1812. But the Franks stayed away from
Westminster even though got land there because worried about the sympathies
of all those "Americans" living there already and a Westbrook squatted on
their land and they had trouble getting it back but seemed to because
Elizabeth daughter of a Loyalist.[rootsweb: Stan Cornelius: Westminster Township info many surnames 
Dell, Elizabeth (I969)
 
638 Ontario Marriage Record transcribed as Richard Jackson marrying "Lavine Monnell", 25 in 1867, parents were George & Elizabeth. This must be a mistranscription of Lavina Mennill and was the clue linking Lavina with the Mennills and Mannings.
1852 census: Lavinia Mennil, 10, living with parents George & Elizabeth & 5 siblings in Westminster next door to Alonzo Manning family (brother of Elizabeth Ann Manning); b. Canada West
1861 census:
1871 census: Lavinia Jackson, 28, living with husband Richard, daughter Mary in Westminster; b. Ontario
1881 census: Lavina Jackosn, 38, living with husband Richard, daughter Mary in Westminster; b. Ontario

Ontario Deaths: Lavina Jackson, 39, died in childbirth 1 day, 29 July 1881, informant: Alonzo Manning (maternal uncle)

Jackson 1
 
Mennill*, Levina (I1322)
 
639 Orley and his cousin Melvin laid the concrete around the Jacob and Anne stones
Orley worked for Byron Telephone Co, and for Ontario Hydro 
Dale, Orley (I728)
 
640 participated in Civil War and died in Alabama
Was he the son of Seth Dutton, a Watson settler who left during the War of 1812?

findagrave.com:
Birth: unknown
Death: Apr. 16, 1864

Victory Dutton enlisted in Co.A,1st Michigan Engineers & Mechanics on December 10,1863 at Jackson,Michigan at the age of 44.He died of disease at Bridgeport,Alabama and was buried there.After the war,he was moved to the military cemetery at Chattanooga. 
Dutton, Victory Tombinson (I1671)
 
641 Pedigree Resource File says born 11 Feb 1881 London Blinn, Bertha Elizabeth (I1146)
 
642 Pedigree Resource File says born 23 jun 1883, London; died about 1963 Blinn, Warren Andrew (I1145)
 
643 PELLUM CARTWRIGHT TEEPLE (originally spelled Pelham), thirteenth and youngest child, and ninth son of Peter Teeple, was born 28th November, 1809, and was a participator in the Upper Canadian Rebellion of 1837, or "The Patriot War," as it was then often called. He was the leader of a band of young Canadians opposed to the long misgovernment of the country by an irresponsible body of men known as "The Family Compact," who ignored the statutes passed by the parliamentary representatives of the people, and frustrated their will; and when it was determined to fight, he was chosen a captain; but on the flight to the United States of the two principal leaders, William Lyon Mackenzie and Hon. John Rolph, all those who had been leaders under them were compelled to follow them into exile or forfeit their lives.
Pellum, on attempting to flee, fell in with a party of soldiers who made him their prisoner. The story of his capture and escape is thus told by his nephew, Luke, son of Simon Peter Teeple, who heard it from his own lips:
"The price set upon his head by the Canadian Government was $600 dead or alive.' He was determined to leave Canada and was then on his way to the western frontier line. He was riding a horse, and had reached a point some seven or eight miles westerly from London, Ont., on the road leading from that city along the southern side of the River Thames. His brother, Edward Manning Teeple, lived on this road some two or three miles from London, and he was making for his house. On turning a bend in the road he came in full view of a sergeant and six men advancing towards him. He could neither retreat nor conceal himself, so he rode steadily on and met them. The sergeant halted him and plied him with questions; and as his answers were unsatisfactory he was taken in charge, faced about, and obliged to go with them towards London. They dismounted him, and the sergeant rode the horse. Plodding along for some time, darkness overtook them before they reached the city. They stopped at a tavern and the soldiers ordered a meal, which was at once prepared. They then asked him to come and eat with them, but he assured them he was not hungry, and they left their arms in the bar-room and went into the next room and sat down to eat.
He also went with them into the same room, and asked the waitress for a drink of water, he was on the side of the table next to the outside door, and as the girl gave him the drink of water she flung this door wide open. In an instant he was through it and running for the woods. The men sprang for their arms, and came rushing out, firing after him. He could hear the orders given to surround the cluster of tavern buildings, and see lights moving, but he made good his escape into the adjoining forest. There was snow on the ground and running was difficult., yet for the fear of being overtaken he kept it up until almost exhausted. Taking what he supposed to be a course between the public road and the river, he at length came upon the latter, but he did not know whether above or below his starting point. Going down to the water, which was frozen over, he followed along until he espied an airhole; into this he threw a stick to see which way the water ran, then going down the stream, he finally came upon a house. By this time he was excessively fatigued, and very, very hungry from his long fast- He went up and knocked at the door, and a man appeared and began talking with him. He had no means of ascertaining whether this man was a 'Patriot' or not, so he feigned himself an urgent despatch-bearer of important official papers which must be delivered in London with utmost haste; he said he had given out in travelling, and insisted upon the man's acceptance of and conveyance of them to London forthwith, as he was utterly unable to go on himself. The man demurred; so, after an earnest discussion Pellum said, 'Well, if I could rest a few minutes and get some food to eat, I might try to go on.' He then heard the man's wife getting up, and she protested that her husband could not go, but said she would get Pellum something to eat at once, which she did. While eating he became satisfied they were ' Patriots,' and revealed his true position. The man then said they could not keep him there, but that they would see that he was hidden and fed at a neighbor's over the hill. Pellum went with him to the neighbor's and was concealed there for a time. If there was any likelihood of capture one of the children at the first house was to come over the hill and notify him. He was alarmed one day by seeing one of the children come running over the hill; but it proved to be only a neighborly call. After a few days had passed, and he thought search for him had ceased, he worked his way through the woods at night up to his brother Edward's, and soon after went in the same way to the home of his sister Mary, wife of Andrus Davis, at Orwell, Ont. Several weeks were spent in this hazardous trip.
"Mary and Andrus Davis were known to be staunch Loyalists, and there is no account of any attempt to search for him at their place. There he was supplied with food for a short time, but the danger of recapture was so great that he did not remain all the time in the house but kept concealed sometimes in the woods.
"Still fearing arrest and execution, as some of his compatriots had thus suffered, his sister Mary Davis, nephew James Teeple, and sister-in-law Jemima Teeple, conducted him secretly in the dead of winter by sleigh from Orwell to the Niagara frontier; and his relative, Rev. Samuel Rose, of Lundy's Lane, though a political opponent of the Patriots, espoused his cause, and under the pretence of being the employer of Pellum, sent him on a message to friends in New York State, and at once hired a man to row him across at some point below the Falls.
"He, Pellum, grew very intense when relating this part of the narrative, and declared that had anyone ordered the boatman back to the Canada shore he would have thrown the man overboard and made the attempt to reach the American shore alone. But no difficulty arose; he was safely landed in New York State, and waving a parting adieu to this relatives, who sat in their conveyance and witnessed his crossing, he began his career in the United States."
Though the Patriot War thus came to so inglorious an end, it is now generally admitted in Canada that had it not been for that uprising by which the attention of the British Government was called to the intolerable grievances of the Canadians, and a just form of responsible government quickly conceded, it would in all probability have been many years before the people of Canada would have obtained that full measure of home rule which, they henceforth enjoyed.
We next hear of Pellum journeying down the Ohio River with a party intending to go to Texas, but becoming dissatisfied with the roistering habits of his companions, he left them and struck across the country to a place called Pekin, on the Illinois River. From there he eventually went to the city of Rockford, Ill., where on the 28th of March, 1841, he married Mary A. Gleason, who is still living.
His father and mother were now so old they were desirous he should come home to Canada and care for them the rest of their days; but he would not do this until a special amnesty was sent him by the Canadian Government for his part in the Patriot War. This was obtained and forwarded to him, and he journeyed to the old home in Oxford County, accompanied by his wife, son Charles, and Luke, son of Simon Peter Teeple, (who lived with them), in a two-horse buggy, there being no railroads, and remained there till the two old pioneers were laid away in the churchyard. Later he returned to Illinois and settled at Marengo, where he died on the 12th of December, 1878, and where his son Charles, above referred to, still resides. Pellum Teeple left six sons, viz. :--Charles Gleason, Addison Venelle, Levant, Jared, Lester, and Frank; and four daughters--Elmina, Elvira, Ruth L., and Lydia Mary.
Of the other descendants of Frederick Mabee and Peter Teeple little or nothing of special note is known to the present writer, except the dates of their birth and death, and that Oliver Mabee Teeple was also a captain at Lundy's Lane; but it is hoped that the survivors, should they read these lines, will, as speedily as possible, contribute their quota to these annals before it is too late; and above all, that they will prove worthy successors of those sturdy "Pilgrim Fathers of Canada" who, for the sake of what they believed, rightly or wrongly, to be their duty, were willing to undertake, not only the perils of war, but also the hardships and privations of hewing out for themselves, and for their children, in the wild forests of Turkey Point, new homes and habitations, destined after one hundred years to become an important part of a great and mighty state. [Sketch of Peter Teeple, Loyalist and Pioneer - W.B. Waterbury] 
Teeple, Pellum Cartwright (I1248)
 
644 Perkins

-1852 census: Harris Perkins, 46, farmer, living with wife Harriet, 3 sons, 1 daughter, brother Caleb's family, widowed father Roger; living with Caleb Perkins; Universalist; b. USA
1861 census: Harris Perkins, 56, living at Westminster with wife Harriet, 4 sons, 4 daughters; b. USA
-1871 census: living in Caradoc 
Perkins*, Harris (I1027)
 
645 Perkins 2 Perkins*, Alza Jane (I1054)
 
646 Perkins 3 Perkins*, Charles W. (I1055)
 
647 Perkins/Gardner/Brown
-a livery stable keeper

jamescobban.net says his middle name was Cander. There was a Roger Perkins, b. 1869 Derby, CT who married Betsy Candee. Is this where the name came from? But that Roger and Betsy died in 1834 in the US and jamescobban.net does not link our Perkins with this Roger and Betsy. 
Perkins*, Freeman C. (I420)
 
648 Perkins/Gardner/Brown McDonnell*, Mary (I419)
 
649 Perkins/Gardner/Brown Perkins*, Clarence E. (I1032)
 
650 Perkins/Gardner/Brown Perkins*, Orinda (I1051)
 

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