Mary Anna TEETZEL, .III

Female 1840 - 1906  (65 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Mary Anna TEETZEL, .III was born on 26 Dec 1840 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario (daughter of John Solomon TEETZEL, Jr. and Hadassah HESTER LAWRENCE, DUE); died on 4 Aug 1906 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried on 6 Aug 1906 in Morton Hill Cemetery.

    Notes:

    Mary Anna is the daughter of Hester Lawrence & John S Teetzel.

    . 1869 Minutes of the Michigan Methodist Episcopal Church Annual Conference.
    Mrs. John Teetzel & Miss M. A. Teetzel, each $1.00.

    . Morton Hill Cemetery: Mrs. W. A. Smith B 1842, died 1915 (William Smith not list for this cemetery.)

    . Alternate date of marriage 31 Oct 1870 to William Smith. Verify. - - -

    Birth:
    Ref: MI. Death Cert.

    Died:
    COD: Hemiplegia. Aged: 65y 5m 8d. = 1841.2.24

    Buried:
    VERIFY buried or listed also at Crystal Springs Cem.

    Mary married William A SMITH on 31 Oct 1870 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan. William was born in 1847 in Ohio; died on 11 Oct 1873 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried in Berrien County, Michigan. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Married:
    Mich Reg. # 241


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  John Solomon TEETZEL, Jr. was born on 15 Apr 1815 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario (son of Charles Frederick TEETZEL, Sr. and Mary TUFFORD); died on 29 May 1894 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried in Morton Hill Cemetery.

    Notes:

    John S. Junior is the son of Mary Tufford & John Solomon Teetzel Sr.

    > Two Lawrences sisters married two Teelzel brothers:
    . Hadassah Hester Lawrence married John Solomon Teetzel Jr.
    . Jane Lawrence married Mathias Teelzel &
    > Lawrence cousin married their sister:
    . Richard Lawrence Johnston married Julia Ann Teetzel.

    . 1835 - (Esquesing, County of Halton) As soon as it was completed the first religious services were held in the Balinafad village school & meetinghouse on the corner of Nathaniel Rossel's lot [Roszel]. The meetings were held on a weekday & it was surprising to see the way the people would leave their work attend Divine Service. This was continued for several years.
    The first religious awaking was brought about in a rather mysterious manner. A man named John Teetzel, who lived near where Acton now is, was thrown on a sick bed. He thought he was going to die. He had been a wicked man. In seeking someone to pray with him, he learned that in all the families for miles around no one could be found to do it. He then thought that he was lost. But just as he was about sinking into despair, the Lord gave some peace to his soul & gave him joys of salvation. He then & there pledge himself to God that he would consecrate his life to Him. And he faithfully kept his promise.
    As soon as he got well, he sought out the Methodist ministers & they took him into the church. He at once commenced to hold meetings on Sabbath days around in private houses. A number of people were awakened & converted. My parents were among the number. For some years Mr. Teetzel was a power for good in that section of the country. He long since died in full assurance of faith & is now enjoying the reward of the father.
    [Exact date is unknown, but the writer's story continues in fall of 1835 - PJA]
    Ref: Experiences of a backwoods preacher, by Rev. H. Heiland, 1887

    . 1842 Census Upper Canada, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario:
    John Tetizel, Lot 228, Con 1 or Lot 28, Con 2? [last lot before Palermo, ON.], Labourer, 7 residents, 25 Acres, 10 cultivated.
    Note1: To researchers: a dot artifact on microfilce may appear to read John Titzel.
    . 1842 Upper Canada Census - Trafalgar Twp., Halton County, Ontario:
    Tetzel, John: Con 1, Lot 30, faded entry, [No column names on this census page & by count are:]
    Column 7: 4; Col 12-13: one; one; Col 22: one; Col 26: one; Col 29: one; Col 46: four; 100 Acres; 60; 50; 20, - ; 25. {rest runs off page.]

    . 1852 January Census Trafalgar, Halton County, Ontario
    John Teetzel, Farmer, Age 34 b. 1818 Canada, E. Methodist, Frame one story house
    Hadasah Teetzel, Age 40, b 1812, Canada
    Elizabeth J, Age 14, b. 1838, Canada
    Mary A, Age 12, b. 1840, Canada
    Margaret, Age 9, b. 1843, Canada
    John W., Age 8, b 1844, Canada
    George, Age 5, b. 1847, Canada
    Esther F., Age 3, b. 1849, Canada
    Charles W Teetzel, Age 1, born 1851, Canada, E. Methodist.

    Ontario Land Registry Abstract Halton Co.,
    Trafalgar Book 24, & p189-90.
    Lot 30, Con 1 South of Dundas Street, Trafalgar Twp.
    . 1808 Oct 18, Patent, Crown, to Bildad Simons, All 200 Acres;
    . 1811 Apr 27, B&S, Bildad Simons, to Chas Teetzel, 90A, North Lot
    . 1854 Mar 23, John Teetzel & Wife, to Aleucusedge Trxx?, fifth of an Acre, Half.

    . 1859 Mar 23 - Advertisement St. Joseph Foundry & Machine Shop! too H Botham Proprietor, All Kinds of Work on the shortest notice. Steam Engine of 20 horse power has lately been added to establishment, also Extensive Iron lathes,
    Bore out Gear Wheels, or bullies 20 feet in diameter.
    Drills for mill owners, Iron Columns & window Sills & capes, Sugar kettles, cooking stoves for valor & box stove, Plows of 8 different kinds.
    - I have lately had a trail of my plows on Mr. John Teezel's farm in Benton twp. against a plow manufactured in Mishwakee, Ind. Signed, St. Joseph Plow, Henry C Morton, Chas. Hull, John Teetzel, Jas Silver, of St. Jospeh, Mich.
    Ref: St. Joseph Saturday Herald newspaper.

    . 1865 - Application for Pension, Widow Mary Elizabeth Lawrence, wife of Richard S Lawrence, Jr. for his death of Typhoid Pneumonia during the American Civil War.
    Witnesses sworn: Signed, John Teetzel & Hester Teetzel, Benton Twp., Widow of Richard S Lawrence. They know the decreased soldier from a long personal acquaintance of more than 30 years.

    Affidavit1: 1865 Sept 13, Notary Public for Berrien Co.
    Jane Teetzel of St. Joseph, Aged 55 years, b.1810 &
    John Teetzel of Benton, age 49 years, b. 1816 ... Certify to be repeatable & entitled to credit. That they resided for many years previous & subsequently to 14 Oct 1830 at Palermo in Halton Co., Canada West. On that day Richard S Lawrence & Mary Elizabeth Simons were united in holy matrimony at the house of William Simons* in said Village of Palermo by the late Rev Mr King, a Presbyterian Clergyman. She is his widow. Jane Teetzel was present & witnessed the ceremony.

    John Teetzel was a boy at that time & was at the house of his father on the opposite side of the Street from the said house where the said marriage took place & that the other members of the family were present & public records were not made & he know the said parties, signed, Jane Teetzel & John Teetzel.
    Note2: Who is William Simons?

    . 1860 Census Benton Twp., Berrien, Michigan
    John Teetzel, b 1816; Hester, b 1813; Mary A, b 1841; Marg., b 1843; John W., b 1845; Geo, b 1840; Hester F., b 1851; Charles W Teetzel, b 1852.
    IRS Tax Assessments Lists: 1863 Jan - Dec.
    . Teetzel, John, Benton- Sources of Income: Farming. Valuation $100., Tax Duty A.32, Abstract Class B #241, Class C: Enumerated articles: 32. Total Tax Due: $3.00.
    . Teetzel, John, Benton- Sources of Income: Farming. Valuation $100., Tax Duty A.32, Abstract Class B #10, Class C: B. Enumerated articles: 59.

    . 1862 Dec 17 -Dr. Collins is located on the bluff north of the Paw Paw, has an orchard of 10 acres of peaches… Mr. Teetzel & J T Smith have each orchard from 10 to 20 acres new by & several more from 5 to 20 A.
    Ref: St. Joseph Herald.

    1864, May 17: Teetzel, John, Benton - Sources of Income: Farming. Valuation $100., Tax Duty A3, Abstract Class B #A, Class B: 32. Total Income Tax Due: $3.00.
    . Teetzel, John, Benton - Sources of Income: Farming. Valuation $100., Tax Duty A.32, Abstract Class B #10, Class B: 59. Total Income Tax Due: $10.00.

    . 1865 May 8, Teetzel, John, Benton Harbor, Source: Stallion Keeper, #236, Tax on item $10. Total Income Tax Due: $10.00. Benton Harbor.

    . 1867 Bell Chapins, Michigan Gazetteer:
    Benton Harbor: John Teetzel, Fruit grower.
    Bridgeport Centre, John Teetzel, Carpenter. Bridgeport Twp. on Flint & Here Marquette railroad, 6 miles s of E Saginaw, Population about 500.

    . 1870 Jun 24 Agricultural Census Benton Harbor
    John Teetzel: 75 Improved Acres, 75 Unimproved A., Value $15,000.
    Live Stock 7 Horses, 3 Milch Cows; 4 Working Oxen; 2 Other Cattle; Sheep 5; Holxx 6 = value $12,000;
    Grains: Winter Wheat 100 bu.; Indian Corn 300 bu., Oats 250 bu., & Buckwheat 20 bu.

    . 1871 March 8th, Ottawa. No. 836, John Teetzel, of the Twp. of Howard, Co. Kent, Province of Ontario, Farmer, a certain new & useful machine for ditching to be called or known as: "Teetzel's Ditching Machine."
    Ref: Canada Gazette, Vol5, #25, 1871 Dec 116, Pg. 5.

    . 1817-1877 - Brothers Hiram H. & Mathias Teetzel resided Benton Harbor, MI, John Teetzel fruit grower, also listed as carpenter in Bridgeport Centre, Saginaw.
    . Benton Harbor, A thriving post village in the Twp. of Benton, Berrien Co., situated on the St. Joseph river, 1 m. from its mouth. It contains 4 general stores 1 hardware & 1 drug store, 1 hotel 1 flouring mill, a large grain house, 4 saw mills & several mechanics shops. Population 300.

    1871 Jun 9 - NARROW ESCAPE: One of the severest electrical explosions we overheard occurred here last Friday afternoon, when there was but little appearance of a storm. the report was instantaneous, like that of a pistol short & was such a crash of thunder as to startle every one who heard it. The lightning struck & shattered a cherry tree not far from the residence of Hon HC Morton & so socked John Teetzel, who was near the tree & in charge of men repairing the road, that for a few moments he was unconscious He was however, uninjured.

    . 1871 Benton Harbor, Berrien Co. Directory: John Teetzel, fruit grower, SW Section 17, Territorial Road, Dr. Talman Wheeler established the "Teetzel Orchard" where he grew peaches & other fruit crops. These were the area's first formal peach orchards; they began bearing fruit in 1852. By 1855 several thousand baskets of peaches - mostly Crawfords - were being shipped to Chicago annually. The fruit was sold for $3 per bushel; the peaches were then peddled by street vendors for 10¢ each. When news of the growing qualities of south western Michigan reached points east, a steady stream of families moved to the area to try their hand at growing peaches. When the Civil War began, (1863) the departure of men joining the army created a shortage of manpower to work the state's farms. .... New sawmills produced apple barrels & peach baskets. The peach also was responsible, in large part, for the founding & early growth of Benton Harbor. Sometimes the profits form one peach crop paid for the entire land they were grow on on. ... (after 1906) the introduction of refrigerated railroad cars, Michigan's monopoly of the Chicago peach market disappeared.
    Ref: Berrien County's Great Peach Boom, by Wm. John Armstrong.

    . BY AN OLD SETTLER OF BERRIEN COUNTY, The "Peach Belt" was inaugurated in 1847, at this time there lies in sight from the ridge where I first got sight of that tall timber…& out of that rail timber I had at one time a mile of fence which was too high for a deer to jump. This was necessary in the fall to keep the bucks from rubbing & twisting my fruit trees with their horns. In 1850 (I think it was), Mr. E. Morton put out something of a peach orchard in addition to his fence corner trees & shortly after Dr. Talman Wheeler set what is known as the Teetzel orchard. At this time nearly all the older farms had seedling trees bearing & those men who had a surplus above their own wants began to sell at what they thought good prices.

    In Watervleit, Michigan, there was a boarding-house for mill hands ...afterwards it was sawed in two, one-half as Bradt's blacksmith-shop & the other as Mr. Teetzel's residence. - Mr. Teetzel of Berrier.

    . 1876 Nov 18 - MORTGAGE SALE - Default has been made in the conditions of a mortgage made Oct 6, AD 1874, by John Teetzel & Hester Teetzel his wife, to Ephraim E Gates of Thorndike, Mass., recorded Oct 7, 1874, Liber 13, p 268, Register of Deeds, Berrien Co., MI. There is claimed to be due & unpaid on this mortgage at the date of this notice, $1302 & $75 mentioned in said mortgage.
    Wed. Feb 14, AD 1877 this mortgage will be foreclosed by sale of the mortgage premises, at front door Berrien Springs Court House.
    Description of mortgage premises is substantial: E 35 A. of section 17, Town four south, range 18W & much of W NE section 17 between Watervleit & Territorial Rd, including Residence at the junction of said roads & 3 acres adjacent. Signed, St. Joseph, Nov 15, 1876. E B Gates, Mortgagee.
    Ref: St. Joseph Saturday Heard newspaper.

    . John H Lee advertises in another column for a renter to take charge of the 140 acres known as the Teetzel farm just east of this village. Ag good chance for someone to do well.
    .I will lease on favorable terms, that farm of 140 A., half mile east of Benton Harbor, , formerly known as the Teetzel place, to an energetic & reelable man. for particulars see John H Lee, St. Joseph.
    . 1880 May 18 - Benton Harbor, Michigan, USA. United States Patent Office:
    Partner Information U.S. Patent & Trademark Office Patents, 1790-1909 Record for U.S. Patent & Trademark Office Patents - Invented a Well-Boring machine.
    . 1881 Apr 28 - John Teetzel reports things booming in the well boring machine. Ref. Daily Evening Herald, Saint Joseph, MI.
    . 1881 Jul 14, The Town Pump is coming, but it is coming under a storm. The Committee having the well in charge have gotten the Teetzel Well boring Co. at work investigating the old well, which has already cost the corps many hundreds of dollars. Public opinion this morning seems be decidedly against trying the site of the old experiment over again. The objections raised to this site are, that it is over an old ravine & under a gutter thought which passes mrs of the filth of a block & has twice been tried without success, no more funds should be risked there. Many want the all tried on the school lot, corner of main & Ship St.; or near Mr Marsh on ship St, of St. Charles Hotel, provided the wells sunk at a new point. However, all the people want in this matter is cusses & PURE Water. How would it do to decide the location by petition.
    Ref: Daily Evening Herald, St. Joseph.

    . 1882 Sep 14, At Benton Harbor a Teetzel well augar was placed in position at 2 pm. & the last tile was adjusted at 10 minutes past 5 o'clock, making 40 feet of 12 inch well dug & stoned up in a trifle over 3 hours.
    Ref: Lake County Star Newspaper, Chase, Michigan.

    . 1884 May 24, St. Joseph, Sat.
    The St. Joseph Iron Works has just closed a contract with J W Teetzel & R A Kneeland, of Benton Harbor, for the exclusive manufacture & sale of the well known Teetzel Patent Well-Boring Machine. The Iron Works Company will push the work on this machine with a view of making it one of the leading industries of our village.

    * 1887 Jul 15, Friday. John Teetzel has returned from ST. THOMAS, ONTARIO, where he attended the meeting of the Teetzel heirs. They are arranged to send Wm. Teetzel of Detroit & James Teetzel, of St. Thomas, to Germany to look after the estate.
    . 1894 Sep 21 - Mrs Wm Eberlee & daughter of Saginaw, visited at John Teetzel's this week.
    Ref: Yale Expositor newspapier, MI.

    . 1887 Mich. Crop Report: Solar halos were reported at Benton Harbor on May 5, 9, 25, 18. ( i.e. weather -planing forecast); Snow on the ground. Benton Harbor 1.5 Inches at the end of month May. High temperature: 82 degrees at Benton. Apples, peach, pear & cherry trees in bloom 2nd May, - Red headed woodpecker, king bird, wild canary & red bird first seen on the 3rd day. Large flock of ducks passing rapidly north, very noisy 3rd day.
    Ref: Rainbow Benton H. 17th May.

    . 1888 Mar 24, St. Joseph Herald
    F. Platt has just had a well dug by the Teetzel Well-Boring Co.

    . 1889 Feb 16 - John Teetzel is quite ill at his home on Empire avenue.
    . 1892 Jan 26 - John Teetzel & on Chas W Teetzel & Miss Franc Teetzel are all quite such with the grip.

    . 1889 Sept 20, Fri. The Dowagiac fair will be held 24th to & will be a first class exhibition throughout this Premium lists or other information will be supplied by Teetzel brought us some fine samples of peaches from his new variety Crawford. He has one hundred trees of this variety. Ref: Weekly Palladium.

    . 1890 Sept 12, Homestead Newspaper, Des Moines, Iowa
    Article & LARGE DRAWING of the TEETZEL WELL AUGER & DRILL, made by the Globe Well Works, Ottawa, Illinois.
    The cut on this pate shows the Teetzel Well Auger with the new drilling attachment as used on all the combined machines now by by the Globe Well Works of Ottawa, Illinois. The same attachment can be added to the old machines made by them at a small expense. The drill as now operated is believed to be the most complete & practical device for drilling through rock of any yet made, as it works faster with the least lost of time or power. The manufactures in their circular describe it as follows:
    A ratchet arm is fastened on the end of a shaft driven by a sprocket chain & intermediate gear & comes in contact with the rope to which the drill is attached, while making a sweeping movement, thereby raising the drill until the arm passes the perpendicular when it disengages itself in the ratchet & the drill is dropped, the arm being thrown around just in time to catch the drill on rebound & the operation is repeated."
    To those familiar with well making apparatus this may be very plain, but to many others it will not be so easily understood. It is plain & simple enough, however, when seen in operation. The same apparatus in general is used to operate this as is used to operate the TEETZEL WELL AUGER which has the great advantage over all others of removing the dirt as fast as it is bored without taking the boring rod or shaft from the well. In operating some well machines in less than less the time is spent in taking the shaft to pieces to get the dirt out & in putting it together again. The advantages of using the one here described is apparent. For full information write the Well Works, Ottawa, Illinois.

    [Drawing Description: a portable drill mounted on a metal carriage bed, employing a bicycle-type chain gear, with an offset balance bar which appears to turn in circle for use by human or horse power (?). I would like to suggest this invention by John Teetzel may have its origins back to the successful water mill that John Teetzel with brother Mathias Teetzel, operated back in Trafalgar, Halton Co., (now Milton, Ontario). - P J Ahlberg 2010.]

    . 1894 Jun 1, Fri. Death of John Teetzel, an old resident of Benton Harbor, died at the home of his son Charles Teetzel, last Tuesday 8 o'clock, aged 75 years old. some weeks ago his mind became xx & for the past 3 weeks has been confined to his bend with complains of the stomach from which he xx. Teetzel was a native of Canada.
    He leaved the following children: Chas. & George Teetzel Mrs Smith, Mrs Andrew Kennedy. Miss Hester Teetzel of Chicago, Mrs Horace Brunson of Chicago, John Teetzel also of Illinois. Funeral was held Thursday afternoon from the house on Empire Ave. burial in Morton Cemetery.
    Ref: Semi Weekly Palladium, Benton Harbor, page 3 is slightly torn with a few missing words.

    . 1903 Mar 1, Saginaw Newspaper: Niles has secured the Teetzel machine works of Ottawa, Il, which employs 57 men. The head of the firm is here & has secured suitable quarters. the concern turns out each-boring & rock - driving machines & air systems for water works.
    Ref: Saginaw News, Michigan.

    Research & transcriptions by PJ Ahlberg. Thank you. - - -

    Birth:
    Alt DOB 1811 or 12 Sept 25th.

    John married Hadassah HESTER LAWRENCE, DUE on 18 Jul 1837 in Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario. Hadassah (daughter of Lieut. Richard LAWRENCE, , UE and Mary WILLSON, DUE) was born on 21 Sep 1812 in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario; died on 4 Jan 1888 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried in Morton Hill Cemetery. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Hadassah HESTER LAWRENCE, DUE was born on 21 Sep 1812 in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario (daughter of Lieut. Richard LAWRENCE, , UE and Mary WILLSON, DUE); died on 4 Jan 1888 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried in Morton Hill Cemetery.

    Notes:

    Hadassah is the daughter of Mary Willson & Richard Lawrence. Hadasah used her second name Hester at times & is an archaic form for written 'ss' as in Hadapah.

    > Two Lawrences sisters married two Teelzel brothers :
    . Hadassah Hester Lawrence married John Solomon Teetzel Jr.
    . Jane Lawrence married Mathias Teelzel &
    > Lawrence cousin married their sister:
    . Richard Lawrence Johnston married Julia Ann Teetzel.

    . UC Land Petition 27, 1835 Jul 1,
    Mathias Teetzel, Residence Trafalgar, Ontario.
    Patent Lot 7, Con 11, Brooke Twp., Lambton Co., Ontario, 1839 JUN 26. Recognized at the York Court House to be the daughter of Richard Lawrence, innkeeper.
    Note1: Location, Brooke Mills, today Alvinston.

    1835 July 1, Wed. D'Arcy Boulton, Esq, JP, Chairman. - Hadassah Lawrence, of the Township of Trafalgar, in the District of Gore, Spinster, appeared in open Court & was Recognized to be a Daughter of the late Richard Lawrence of the District of London, formerly of York Twp. in the Home District, Innkeeper, deceased, an U.E. Loyalist, & a certificate was signed by the Chairman & Clerk of the Peace accordingly.

    . Haddasah Lawrence Marriage Bond # 6053
    Mathias Teetzel & John Teetzel of Trafalgar Twp., Gore District bond themselves to pay £200.
    Signed, at Toronto, Home District, on 18 July, 1837.
    John Teetzel of Twp. of Trafaglar in the Gore District, Bachelor & Hadassa H. Lawrence, of the same place, Spinster.
    Signatures of John Teetzel & Mathias Teetzel.
    Note2: But not Haddassah's signature! Photocopy too faint for duplication. -PJA
    Upper Canada Marriage Bond 6-53, Microfilm C6786.

    . Moved to Benton Harbor, Michigan with her sister, brother Richard Lawrence Jr. & Cousin Richard Lawrence Johnston, mother Margaret Lawrence, married a Teetzel also.

    . 1860 Census Michigan, Berrien, Benton, FILM 537, FAMILY 1658 -
    Teetzel, Hester, 47, b. 1813 in Canada East.

    . 1869 Minutes of the Michigan Methodist Episcopal Church Annual Conference, Benton Harbor, Mrs. John Teetzel & Miss M. A. Teetzel, each $1.00. Hull, MI, Goe. Teetzel $1. Mason, MI. James Teetzel.

    . 1871 John Teetzel, fruit grower, SW Section 17, Territorial Road, Benton Harbor, Berrien Co. Directory.

    . 1878 Polk Directory, Benton Harbor & St. Joseph's Directory: John Teetzel, res. Lincoln street.

    * 1887 Jan 15 - Mrs John Teetzel, Sr, is very ill rather home on Empire avenue. Ref: News Palladium Newspaper, Benton Harbor, MI.

    . 1888 Jan 4, Obituary. Death of Mrs John Teetzel. wife of John Teetzel, sr. & mother of Mr C W Teetzel, the jeweler, died at her home on Empire avenue at noon today, aged about 74 years. She was taken ill last Monday night, with hemorrhage of lungs, the attach terminating fatally. Mrs Teetzel was an old resident, esteemed for many virtues. She leaves beside her husband 6 children, Charles & George Teetzel, Mrs Andrew Kennedy & Miss Hester Teetzel of Benton harbor, Mrs. Horace Brunson of Chicago & John Teetzel of Ottawa, Ill. The later have been summoned by telegram. The funeral is not yet arranged.

    . 1888 Jan 5, Mrs John Teetzel whose death was noted our least issue, left 7 children, one name was inadvertently omitted from our list, that of Mrs Will Smith. Funeral will occur on Friday afternoon.
    * Mrs. Hamilton, of Peachville, Mich., a sister of Mrs Teetzel, accompanied by her husband & son Alexander, arrived yesterday afternoon.
    At our last advices it was doubtful whether Mr Mrs John W Teetzel of Ottawa, or Mrs. Brunson, of Chicago, could come to attend the funeral, on account of illness.
    Note3*: Rather than her late husband, it was her son Rev. James Hamilton, junior, along with Rebecca's other son Alexander Hamilton.) There are several 'Peachvilles' in Michigan. Allegan is the peach growing area of Michigan. - PJ Ahlberg.

    . 1888 Jan 7 - John Teetzel & family desire to return their sincere thanks to all the neighbors & friends who so kindly assisted them in their late bereavement.
    - Rev. James Hamilton, of Three Rivers, & Mrs Hamilton & son, of Peach Belt, Allegan county, attended the funeral of their relative, the late Mrs. John Teetzel & returned home today.
    Ref: St. Joseph Herald Newspaper.

    . 1888 Jan 7, Benton Harbor. Mrs. John Teetzel died' Wednesday, aged 74 years. [Wed. 1888 Jan. 4th.]

    . 1961 Apr 6 to 17th, News Palladium, Benton Harbor, MI., Legal Notice:
    Order to Answer, File # C309, State of Michigan in the Circuit Court, Co. of Berrien, Ervin & Virginia Bontranger, Plaintiffs Vs many names, Preston Lumber Co., Maxwell Lumber Co., The Mich. Trust Co., JOHN & HESTER TEETZEL, etc, Defendants. On reading & filing of the complaint in this cause, Ordered that the Defendants & their unknown heirs & devises cause their appearance to be entered on 2 Jul 1963 in default there of.

    Research & transcriptions by PJ Ahlberg. Thank you. - - -

    Birth:
    DUE: Daughter of Empire Loyalist. Alt Spelling: Haddasah & Adasah. Alt DOB 27 Sep 1812.

    Died:
    Berrien Co., Mich Reg. # 35. Dau. of Mary & Richard Lawrence. COD: Lung disease.

    Notes:

    Married:

    Children:
    1. Elizabeth JANE TEETZEL, .i was born in 1839 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died on 22 Jul 1906 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried in Morton Hill Cemetery.
    2. 1. Mary Anna TEETZEL, .III was born on 26 Dec 1840 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died on 4 Aug 1906 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried on 6 Aug 1906 in Morton Hill Cemetery.
    3. Margaret TEETZEL was born on 11 Mar 1843 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died on 18 Feb 1915 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried in Crystal Springs Cemetery.
    4. John W TEETZEL, .3 was born in Mar 1845 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died on 7 Mar 1916 in Terre Haute, Vigo Co., Indiana.
    5. George B TEETZEL, .2 was born on 4 Jul 1847 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died in in Michigan; was buried in Morton Hill Cemetery.
    6. Hester F. TEETZEL, .1 was born on 24 May 1850 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died on 8 Mar 1911 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried on 10 Mar 1911 in Morton Hill Cemetery.
    7. Charles Wesley TEETZEL, .5 was born on 23 Sep 1851 in Toronto, York Co., Ontario; died on 22 Jul 1906 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried in Morton Hill Cemetery.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Charles Frederick TEETZEL, Sr. was born on 10 Sep 1787 in Harwick Twp., Sussex Co., New Jersey (son of John Solomon TEETZEL, .1 and Rachel VANTILL); died on 10 Oct 1856 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; was buried in Palermo United Cemetery.

    Notes:

    . War of 1812
    Muster roll & pay list of a Detachment under command of Maj. Rich. Hatt:
    Charles Teetzel, 25 Apr - June 2, 18183 inclusive, 39 days
    Note of interest1: relatives & future relatives are serving together in this unit, Lewis Felker, various Green men, Adam Mingle, (on Command) & Nathaniel Rosezel. - PJA 2010.

    . Charles signed his legal documents with an "X"..
    Lot 30 Con. 1, South of Dundas Street, Palermo in Trafalgar Twp., Halton, County.

    . UCLPetition 12, To Lt. Gov. Maitland, Petition of Charles Teetzel & John Teetzel, both of Twp. Trafalgar, Gore District. That your petitioners have lived in this Province for the last 20 years in Trafalgar [1799].
    Charles Teetzel has a family of a wife 4 children. - during the late war he was employed for 2 & half years carrying his Magestys dispatches between Burlington & York, as by the acc. gen. order of Gen. Drummond. Therefore you petitions pray to grant them a portion of Crown waste land.
    Signed, Trafalgar, March 8, 1818. Charles Teetze, John Teetzel.
    Ref: UCLP T Bundle 12, Petition 12, Film C2834.

    . 1816 Census, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co.:
    Chas Teetzel, 90 acres. [Log Cabin.] 65 uncultivated & 25 cultivated acres.
    Note2: Simons & Teetzel are in-laws. Log cabins were not taxed so not listed.

    . 1824 Census, Trafalagar Twp., Halton co.
    Chas Teetzel, Lot 30, Con 1 SDS, 40 uncultivated & 50 cultivated acres.

    . 1818 Chas. F. Teetzel gave NE corner of his farm for a Methodist church, school & cemetery.

    . 1833 - UCLPetition 18, To Sir Peregrine Maitland, Lt. Gov. of UC, Petition of Charles Teetzel, Lawrence Hagar, Jacob Shouk, all Twp. Trafalgar & Jacob Markle, Twp. Toronto. We have been in this Province upwards of 20 years. During the late American war, the Petitioners served as militia men in 2nd Gore Reg. & done duty on the lines for 2 years & 6 months. Capt. Hepburn of their Regt. appointed to convey dispatches with zeal & fidelity for about 2 years & half, much to the satisfaction of their officers. That Petitioners having devoted so much of their time to the serviced of their King & County, were in consequence during that period, unable to provide for themselves & families. Charles Tetzeel having a wife & 5 children: L Hager, wife & 6 children, J Markle, wife & & 3 children. They therefore, pray for a grant of Land.
    Signed, 1821 Oct 8, 1821, Trafalgar.
    . UCLBoard Petition T18, 1821 Nov 14. Charles Teetzel, Lawrence Hagar, Jacob Shouk, prying for a grant of land for their Service in the Militia & also Jacob marble. These men cannot be granted without the Adjutant General Certificate. Markle to produce the Adjutant General Certificate before he can be recommended.

    . 1833 Jan 11, 3rd Session, 11th Parliament of William IV: Agreeably to the order of the day, the Petitions of T B Walkefied & 311 others …& Charles F Teetzel & 22 others, Elders & Brethren of the "Christian" church in this Province, praying for the authority to hold by Deed their Meeting Houses & Grave Yards, to purchase & hold farms & to be enabled to receive & convey for the use of their Society any Lands or Tenements devised to them by Will.

    . 1838 March, Upper Canada Sundries, Index C9824, Image xxx & Page 105939-40, p723, C6898.
    Petition of Eli Irwin, Twp. Whitchurch, for Pardon. Petitioner is a married man having a wife & child. He was unfortunately taken a part in the recent troubles, used by desperate & unprincipled persons by shoe he was unhappily seduced from allegiances. Signed, Eli Irwin, March 1830, Jail of the Home District (Toronto).
    Petition of Inhabitants of West Flamborough to Sir Geo Arthur on behalf of prisoners under sentence of high treason. Hundreds of signatures, including Richard Johnston [Sr.], Joseph Simons, Lorenzo & Mathias Teetzel, Charles Jr. & Sr., Teetzel. Read in Council 20 May 1838 & pardoned upon giving into Bail for good for 3 years.

    . Ontario Land Registry Abstract Book, Plan 9, Block 1, pg 476
    Lot 3, Con 2NST, Halton Co.
    . 1852 Jul 12, Mortgage, Charles Teetzel & wife, to MT & wife, to John White, Lot 13, Con 2NST. Six B&S B?
    . 1855 Jan 29, B&S, Chas F Teetzel & wife, to Mathias Teetzel, L3, C2 NST.

    Lot 30, Con 1SDS, Trafalgar, Trafalgar Book 24, pg 189-90.
    . 1828 Apr 3, B&S, Chas. Teetzel, James Hopper & others,£2.10sh., 1/2 Lot & 20, HWSale? Burying ground. Quarter
    . 1844 Jun 3, B&S, Charles Teetzel & Wife, to Janet Keill, widow, 1/4 A.Pt Lot 30.

    . Palermo Cemetery on Dundas Concession 1 SDS, Lot 30:
    He sold the NE corner of his farm to be used for a cemetery & churchyard in 1818 to serve the community. He received £2 10 shillings as payment. The agreement said the land was "forever for the proper use of a place to bury the dead for them & as many of the inhabitants of Trafalgar Township lying between 12 & 16 mile Creeks as many think proper to join them & also for a meeting house & a School House should the same at any time be required." The cemetery plots were to be16 feet square & one of these lots were assigned to each family. For Charles Frederick Teetzel & his heirs there was to be a tract of land one square rod in size for a burial plot to be protected forever.

    A log church was built on the front of the cemetery in 1812 to serve the Episcopal Methodist congregation of Laurence Hager. In 1851 a frame church was built beside the log church & it became the home of the Wesleyan Methodist Congregation. In 1867, a new modern church was built across the road for the Episcopal Methodists, but many still chose to worship at the old building. The log church was eventually used as a stable for some years. This was 17 years before the many Methodists united to become the United Church of Canada.

    After his wife, Mary Tufford, died of consumption in 1856, Charles Frederick Teetzel stayed on his farm for 6 months. Ill health caused him to move to Milton for medical care. He died shortly after. His son, Mathias Hager, purchased land in St. Joseph's, Michigan & moved there about this time.

    Research & transcriptions by PJ Ahlberg. Thank you. - - -

    Died:
    Lot 30 Con 1, SDS.

    Buried:
    Tall white recumbent pillar is shared with wife Mary.

    Charles married Mary TUFFORD on 29 Jul 1810 in Grimsby, Lincoln Co., Ontario. Mary was born on 4 Aug 1788 in Morris Co., New Jersey; died on 26 Mar 1856 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; was buried in Palermo United Cemetery. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Mary TUFFORD was born on 4 Aug 1788 in Morris Co., New Jersey; died on 26 Mar 1856 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; was buried in Palermo United Cemetery.

    Notes:

    Mary is the daughter of George Tufford.

    . TUFFORD -
    The Canadian branch of this family spell their name Tufford. The New Jersey family spell it Dufford & it has also been recorded as Du Ford * Tofort, which was its original spelling. Philip Tofort Sr. & Philip Jr. arrived at Philadelphia on the ship 'Robert and Oliver', 11 September, 1738. They settled in what was then called the Long Valley (German Valley), New Jersey. In his will dated 16 February, 1767, Philip Tofort, Sr., names his wife, Catherine, sons Adam & George, daughter Mary Magdalena & grandson George Stephen, son of Jacob Tofort. The NJ family history states that Jacob was disinherited because he married an Indian maiden.
    George Tufford served in the War of 1812 with the 4th Lincoln Regiment.
    Ref: Annals of the Forty, Vol 9, 1958.

    . Mary Tufford Teetzel died 1856 of consumption.

    Her ten children are:
    1. Mathias Teetzel, b: 1810 in Palermo, Halton County, ON, Canada - 1865 Michigan
    2. Elizabeth Teetzel, b: 12 MAR 1812 - 1786
    3. Julia Ann Teetzel, b: 12 SEP 1814 - 1753
    4. John Teetzel, b: 15 APR 1815 - 1894
    5. Mary Green Teetzel, b: 1822 - 1895
    6. George Teetzel, b: 13 JUN 1825 - 1826
    7. Caroline Teetzel, b: 1826 - 1888
    8. Charles Teetzel, b: 1828 -
    9. William Teetzel, b: 1830 - 1888
    10. Harriet Maria Teetzel, b: 1831 in Palermo, Halton County, ON, CA - 1888. - - -

    Died:
    COD: Consumption.

    Buried:
    Aged 67 y 7m 22 days. Tall white pillar monument.

    Notes:

    Married:
    Verify date. Too early?

    Children:
    1. Mathias TEETZEL was born in 1810 in Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died on 26 Apr 1865 in St. Joseph, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried in Morton Hill Cemetery.
    2. Elizabeth TEETZEL was born on 12 Mar 1812 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died on 17 Sep 1896 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; was buried in Palermo United Cemetery.
    3. Julia Ann TEETZEL, .i was born on 12 Sep 1814 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died on 12 Jul 1853 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; was buried in Palermo United Cemetery.
    4. 2. John Solomon TEETZEL, Jr. was born on 15 Apr 1815 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died on 29 May 1894 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried in Morton Hill Cemetery.
    5. Mary Green TEETZEL, .I was born in 1822 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died in 1895 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried in Crystal Springs Cemetery.
    6. Harriet Maria TEETZEL was born in 1831 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died before 1888 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan.

  3. 6.  Lieut. Richard LAWRENCE, , UE was born on 20 Aug 1759 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey (son of William LAWRENCE, .6 Esq. The Quaker and Margaret TILTON); died before 5 May 1831 in Harwich, Kent Co., Ontario.

    Notes:

    PART ONE:

    Richard is name after his grandfather, Richard Lawrence, Esq., [The Third, 1719-1726.] & in family remberances going back to Richard the Lionhearted.

    . 1771 July 5, List of letters, remaining in the Post Office, Richard Lawrence, Shrewsbury.
    Ref: NY Gazette.
    . Richard Lawrence, Upper Freehold. Ref: Roster of the People of Revolutionary Monmouth County.

    . 1783 New Brunswick, Chrineyonce Vanmater & (Lieut.) Richard Lawrence, UE. petitioned together for land in Prince William Co., NB.
    Note1: This land grant adjacent to his brother John Lawrence, was not taken up because it had previous legal encumbrances. - PJA 2101.

    . Richard Lawrence carried a English Bible giving his & siblings' birth dates. He must have carried this Bible with him at the end of the American Revolution & then to NB & finally to Upper Canada. The Bible was then given to his youngest child, Rebecca. Grandson Walter Hamilton is the last known owner of the Lawrence Bible.

    . 1776 Jul 15, Letters Remaining in the Post Office, New York: Richard Lawrence, Staten Island. Ref: New-York Gazette & Weekly Mercury.

    . OLD UNITED EMPIRE LOYALIST LISTS: Laurence, Richard, Home District, Loyalist from N. Brunswick. Ref: Appendix, Appendix B.

    . 1776 MUSTER: Richard Lawrence:
    . 1777 Feb - 24 Apr - Lawrence, Richard - Private, General Hospital (2 Richards) Muster roll of Capt. Wm. Gray's NYV. Lieut. 1st Co.
    . 1777 Aug 24, - Private Richard Lawrence, 3rd Bat De Lancey's Brigrade, C1880,p1
    . 1777 October 24 - Capt. Gilbert C Willett, 3rd Battalion of Oliver De Lacey, p. 28, at Long Island, #20, Richard Lawrence [Job" Tat? Host or Western? blurry]. {Ref C1880,p7)
    . 1777 Dec 24, Priv. RL, 3Bat DeLancey's Brigrade, C12880,p16;
    . 1778 Apr 24 - Rich. Lawrence, 3rd Bat. Oliver DeLacey. C1880, p22 & ?Compare Priv RL, NYV, C1874p5;
    . 1778 Apr 24, Priv RL, #BDeLancey's Brigrade, C1880,p22, 38;
    . 1778 Jun 24, Priv RL, 3BDeL, C12880,p28;
    . 1778 Sep 4 - C1880, p38; 1778 Oct 24, c1880, p39;
    . 1778 Dec 24, Priv RL, 3BDeL, - Discharged Dec 24th '78. C1880,p50.
    . 1779 November 29, Capt. Thomas Hewlett's Co. NYV - Savannah, Quarter Masters Gen. Dept. & Hewlett's Coy. C1874p49;
    . 1781 Apr, Priv RL, New York Volunteers, c1874,p60 & 1781.12.24 p82;
    Ref: British Military & Naval Records, p49, RG8 Vol C, Printed, 1874. Elsewhere there is a UEL claim for supplies of horses & wagons for Trenton New Jersey.
    Ref: British Military & Naval Records, C1880,p1, RG 8, C Series, & Copy Arch. Canada: Ward Chipman Muster.

    British Headquarters Papers (Carleton Papers or American Manuscripts):
    Richard Lawrence (31688)
    . 1782.5.27, Account for Outstading debs for forage, New York, commissary General Dept., Doc 4668, Film M355, page 4668, Item 31688;
    . 1783.11.21, List of Original Wills, Wills in custody of Secretary of NY, page 9671 (14); Film M366, Item 31689.

    . NB Land Petitions:
    * Note2: 1787 After the American Revolution four Lawrences lived near each other in Saint Johns, New Brunswick: Mrs. Alice Lawrence Leonard (Thomas) Lot 1; Lieut. John Lawrence Lot 101; Lieut. Richard Lawrence was on Lot 169 on the other side of the Saint John River; along with sister Mrs. Margaret Lawrence Nicholson (Arthur) at Lot 52. An important Lawrence family friend, Rev. J Odell of NJ, was adjacent to his land grant as well.

    . Richard gave up his land claim in Prince William because of a prior legal entanglement by an earlier French Canadian inhabitant. Richard also made failed landed petitions with his Monmouth, New Jersey neighbours', Corneilis VanMater* & Capt. Richd. Lippincott, (BUT much later he would again be adjacent to R. Lippencott on Yonge St., Toronto) - PJ Ahlberg.
    Note3: *John Vanmater was a witness to Richard's father, William Lawrence, d. 1795 in Middletown, NJ.

    . 1782 May 27, Richard Lawrence, Outstanding Debts for Forage, New York, Accounts, Commissary General Dept., pg. 4668, (1.3).
    Ref: British Headquarters Papers, (Carleton Papers or American Manuscripts), Microfilm M355, Ref: MG23 B1, Item Number 31688.

    Research Item, (probably someone else, but should be verified):
    . 1783.11.21 - Richard Lawrence, List of Original Wills, Document: Will in custody of Secretary of NY.
    Document Pg. 9671 914), fonds: British Headquarters Papers, Carlton Papers or American Manuscripts, Microfilm M2369,
    Ref: MG23 BA Item # 31689.

    . 1783 DEC 12, PROVINCE OF NEW BRUNSWICK LAND GRANT, NB Archives. George the Third grant to Rev. James Fraser, Edward Rogers, Anthony Rogers, Arthur Nicholson, Esq., John Willson, Junior, Richard Lawrence, Stillwell Willson & James Walsh 2,238 acres on the northwest branch of the River Miramichi in the County of Northumberland. The first track beginning at the alder Stake on the easterly bank or shore of an Island being in the said Branch.
    To John Willson Junior: Lot 1, 200 Acres; To Richard Lawrence the Lot 2 , containing 232 acres, Stillwell Willson, Lot 4, 240 acres. Registered the 12 December, 1793, Thomas Carlton, Lieutenant Governor, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada.

    . 1789 Aug 11. To His Excellency Thomas Carlton. Province of New Brunswick, Memorial of Richard Lawrence of Miramichie,
    Humbly Shewth, that our memorialist has been all the last War in the service of His King & Country, most of the time as a Volunteer in the Army. That a lott of Land has been assigned to him at Prince William in the County of York, but being then a young single man he resigned it. That he is now settled at Miramichie & likes the country, wishes to live by farming in reference to fishing.
    Your Memorialist therefore prays you Excellency may be pleased to grant him a Lot of Land adjoining a lot assigned to Arthur Nicholson, Esq. on the north east side of the North West Branch of Miramichie & your memorialist is duty bound will Pray.
    Richard Lawrence, [Undated, but delivery time about 4 - 6 weeks.]
    Envelope side: Memorial of Richd. Lawrence - Complied with 25th Sept. 1789.

    . 1795 June, there were still only 14 housed in the Town of York.

    ** See photo Photo Original Land Patent may be found at North York Central Library, Willowdale:
    . UC Land Petition 5, Bundle, L Bundle 2, 1795 of York, Richard Lawrence, Sr.
    Ref: C2124, p804. Ont. Archives. Original document is preserved at the North York Public Library, Yonge Street, Toronto. Very large parchment document with an attached was large beeswax seal.
    *Researchers who had other relatives who received an UC Land Grant may wish to see what this very impressive document looked like. This also helps in part to understand why the administration of land granting was so slow.

    . 1796 Apr 6 - To His Excellency John Graves Simcoe, Esquire, Lieutenant Governor & Commissioning his Majesty's forces in Upper Canada. Major General.
    The Memorial of Richard Lawrence Late of the Province of New Brunswick in Nova Scotia That your Memorialist Entered in the Service of His Britannic Majesty at the beginning the Late rebellion continued in the same till the Peace of Eighty three & that since that time he accepted a Commission of first Lieutenant for the County of Northumberland in New Brunswick which he is ready to produce if required - & being Desirous of remaining a Subject to the King of Great Britain in this Province.
    Humbly Prays that his Majesty's most gracious bounty in Lands may be Extended to your memorialist for the following Lotts Viz Number 25 on Yonge Street Eastward & 2 other Lotts in the Rear of Said Number 25 second Concession also a Lott in the Town of York, Number 18 in the second range Which he has improved as well as No 25 Yonge Street & such other quantity of Land as to your Excellency in your Wisdom may seem meet - & your Petitioner as in Duty Bound will ever pray. Signed, 6 April, 1796, Richard Lawrence.

    There are 5 other Upper Canada Land Petitions for Richard Lawrence.
    . The original parchment & seal, LAND GRANT for Lot 25, Concession 1 Yonge Street, east side, 200 Acres, will be found at the Canadian Room, North York Public Library, on Yonge Street, Toronto.
    . 1796 July 30 - Granted Lot 18 D, Duke St., Town of York / [now renamed as: 79 Adelaide, Toronto.] (The next Lot 19 Duke, was granted to Samuel Osborn & his wife, Mrs. Alice Willson Osborn).
    . 1802 May 5 Date of Patent or 18 Duke St., D Block, 1/5 Acre to Richard Lawrence.
    Ref: Robertson's Landmarks of Toronto, Vol 1, p339.
    . Lots 1 & 2, Con 4, Vaughan Twp., 400 Acres.
    Note4: 1796 Oct. 8, is the day he paid his land settlement fees & is sometimes incorrectly quoted as the day he was FIRST granted this land. - PJA.

    . UCLPetition 15, Y Batch 5, p417. -1801 Jul 16 - East Side Yonge St, Lot 25, Nothing done to the Street. [i.e. no logs cleared].

    . 1801 Dec 15. East Side Yonge Street, Lot 25, Logs in the Street, not burnt.

    . 1802 Feb. 21, Lot 1, Con 5, Vaughan Twp., 200 Acres granted to wife, Mary Willson Lawrence.
    . 1803 Post Office Letters, downtown Toronto: This issue contains a list published by the postmaster of uncalled-for letters lying in the post-office at York:
    . Richard Lawrence. (Original Toronto Post Office was one street over from Richard's 179 King Street house. However by
    . 1803, Richard was now up on Yonge & Steeles.)
    Ref: Vol XIL, The Oracle, Saturday Jan. 15, 1803, No. 28, Total No 610.
    Note5: McGill had the 1000 Acres at Lot 25, Con 2, adjoining Richard Lawrence's Land Grant.

    Ontario Lands Registry, Metro Toronto Book 683, p131 [Note: Version 2]
    Lot 18, South side King St., Town of York
    [Original Version 2 adds:] Abstract Town of York, S.S. King
    St., Pt of Town Lot 18: Abstract of all Instruments affect 38.5 feet on South side of King St East x 120 feet deep coming at N.E.L. Town Lot 18 on South of King St & running West & being par t of sd. Town Lot 18.
    . 1802 May 17, Patent, Crown, to Ricd Lawrence, All Contg. 1/5 Acre
    . 1805 Feb 13, Patent, Crown, to Beasley et all, all condj 15 acre,
    . 1805 Feb 19, Mem. Grant, Richd Beasley, survg. Trustee of Tos Barry & Wm. Allan, to Rev. Geo O'Kill Stuart of York, £321.17.16., All et all. Being 1 C in front X 2c deep. To hold unto sd. Grantee his heirs & assigne forever. Sg. by Grantee.

    Abstract North York Book 16, p3
    Lot 25, Con 1 Yonge Street East, York Twp.
    . 1808 Sep 15, Patent, Crown, to Richard Lawrence, All 190 acres.
    . 1806 Jan 20, Registered 20 Mar 1806, Bargain&Sale, Richard Lawrence et ux, to The B Gough, East Half.
    . 1819 Aug 20, B&S, Richard Lawrence, to John S Baldwin, £250, West Half Acres.

    Abstract, Metro Toronto, North York Book 128, p21
    Lot 24, Con 2 West, York Twp.,
    . 1798 Dec 31, Patent, Crown, to Wm. Jarvis, All 200 Acres
    . 1805 Dec 31, B&S, Thos. B Gough, to Richard Lawrence, All 200 A
    . 1809 May 1, B&S, Richard Lawrence, to Jacob Fisher Jr, £100, All 200 A.
    Note6: Adjacent, Lot 23, Con 3, Sawmill, water badly supplied, Peter Keiffer, 1851.

    Abstract Markham Book 91, p22
    Lot 27, Con 1 East Side Yonge St. , Markham Twp.,
    . 1803 July 15, Crown, to John Leslie, All 190A
    . 1804 Aug 31, Bargain&Sale, Thos. McMichen etux, to Richard Lawrence, £100, All 190 Acres.
    .1805 Jun 29, B&S, Richard Lawrence et ux, to John Arnold, £100, All 100A.
    [Beside brothers-in-law, Wm. L Willson, Lot 26; Samuel Osborn Lot 27, & Stillwell Willson The Elder, Lot 30.]

    Abstract York Region, Vaughan Book 185, p4
    Lot 1, Con 3, Vaughan
    . 1802 May 17, Patent, Crown, to Mary Lawrence, All 200 A
    . 1821 Feb 21, B&S, Richard Lawrence et ux, to John Guthrie, £100, All.
    [Near Fairbanks Lumber/ Railway tracks & Steeles W, 2020].-

    Ontario Land Registry Abstract, Vaughan Book 190, p4 & 32,
    Lots 1 & 2, Con 4, Vaughan Twp., York Co., [Keele Street], p4 & p32.
    . 1805 Feb 1, Patent, Crown, to Richard Lawrence, All 400 Acres each [Lots1-2 @ 200A.]
    . 1805 Feb 1, B&S, Richard Lawrence et al, to Thomas McMicking. All 190 A, 200 Acres for Lot 1. & Lot 2 190A.
    Note7: Adjacent Lot 4, Con 3, was a sawmill, Michel Fisher, 1851.
    Lawrence's most productive grant Lot 25 1ES was also part of the Willson sawmill land. Thus the summary suggest Lawrence searched for land that could yield water & tree resources, as opposed to strictly farm land. - P J Ahlberg 2016.

    . 1805 to 1815 at least - Richard Lawrence received Tavern Licenses for the Twp. of York.
    . March 1801, The Special Sessions of Peace, held the "The Court are of opinion that 6 persons are a sufficient number for Keeping Tavern in the Town of York, for the year ensuing.
    . 1805 Dec 28, The undermentioned persons prayed to be admitted as fit persons for receiving Licenses to Keep Taverns in the Home District for the Year next ensuing: Richard Lawrence.
    . 1806 Mar 20 - sells East ½ Lot 25, Con 1 ESYonge St.
    . 1807 - Richard Lawrence owned Lot 18D, south side of King, west of Frederick St. Brother-in-law Sam. Osborn was on the next lot 19D.
    Ref: Toronto Sundries, Home District. Quarter Sessions.

    Special Sessions of the Peace, York, Tavern License for year ensuing,
    . 1815 Dec 30, Town of York: Richard Lawrence, York Twp., Granted.

    Note8: Various sources state the Joseph Abraham ran the first inn called the Green Bush at Steeles & Yonge at the North east corner. In an area noted for tall trees, it must have been a large balsam tree indeed that stood in front of the Inn. The NE corner belong to his brother-in-law Wm. L. Willson. Further research may show the exact location of Lawrence's tavern.

    Regulations included: No excess drinking, no profanities or gambling; sufficient sheds, stables and/or barns were required for the patron's horses, carriages & wagons. The innkeeper should also have at least 4 good beds in addition to those for his family. All of these regulations were controls to limit taverns & increase inns.
    Ref: Margaret McBurney & Mary Byers, Tavern in the Town: Early Inns & Taverns of Ontario. - P J Ahlberg). - . -

    PART TWO: Tracking Richard Lawrence Though Documents:

    . 1759 Aug. 20, Monday born, Middletown, Upper Freehold Twp., Monmouth Co., Prov. of New Jersey. Father William Lawrence's carpenter's shop along with his brothers.
    . 1776 to 1783. American Revolution, New Jersey 1st Volunteers, Christies' Quarter Master Department. He was a volunteer in the army most of the time.
    . 1776 Richard is on Staten Island, NY.
    Note9: UCLPetition Richard gave a reference for Sarah Lakerman Willson who was on Staten Island since 1776, the beginning of the War & therefore, Richard Lawrence too was on Staten Island.

    . 1785 New Brunswick. Purchased land at Musquash Island on the St. John's River from Capt. Richard Lippincott also of NJ.
    . 1786 New Brunswick. By this time he is married to Mary Willson. [Further research: Records of the Anglican minister traveling though the Miramichi?]
    . 1787 Jul 25, Wants land at Prince William, Queensborough, NB. allotted primarily to the Queen's American Rangers (& to future brother-in-law Arthur Nicholson, (ELIZABETH LAWRENCE).
    . 1789 Jul 27, Land Grant: A little beyond the Sandy Point, opposite, Between Island by Johnston Basto, West Branch of Miramichi River, Northumberland County, New Brunswick.
    . 1789 Sep 25 - Granted land at Willson's Point, Miramichi, New Brunswick. Richard builds log gaol at nearby, Newcastle, NB.

    Northumberland Co., New Brunswick, Deed Registry Books, Grantor:
    . 1793 June 15th - Richard Lawrence & Mary Lawrence to William Babcock, Vol 2, Pg. 97, Deed £20 for 200 Acres, 22 cleared with Stockable Dwelling House, 3 Commons Pasture. Signed, John Willson, Esq., JP of Inferior Court of Common Pleas.

    . 1793 July - MAY FLEET *NJ *NY *NB *UC. Evacuation from NY to New Brunswick in 1783. Again the 'May Fleet' leaves around NB by ship & up the St. Lawrence River to Montreal, where John Willson called on Commissary Issac W Clarke for aid. The 60 people including Richd. Lawrence were in the party lead by John Willson, Esq.
    . 1793 Aug 8 - Arrived at Quebec with 60 people. A dozen people remain here. Arrival by 3 bateaux at Kingston on 28 Aug., 1793. Received army rations & medical care. Detained over 30 days waiting for another boat. 1793 Oct. 10, group arrives at Niagara again sick & starved. 25 Oct, Governor J G Simcoe authorizes ship to pick up John Willson & associates.

    . 1792 Sept. Fort George, Niagara. Lieut. Gov. Simcoe orders government ship to bring them Lawrence, Willson & all from Niagara to Town of York.
    . 1793 Nov 2, Arrival at the Town of York, Toronto. Extracted from the documents on the hardships of this voyage to Upper Canada can be found also at 1) Roots.com under JOHN WILLSON.1 & 2.) more extensively in Richard Lawrence of NJ, NB & Ontario. Book may be found at North York Public Library, Toronto. & Richmond Hill Library - PJ Ahlberg, 2009.

    . 1794 April 7 to 30 June, Paid for carpentry, Public Buildings at York. Paid £15 11 s. 3 pennies, on 10 July, 1794.
    . 1795 June 1. Petitions for Lot 25, Con. 1 ES Yonge Street, York Twp., ON WHICH HE HAS ALREADY LOCATED. (Yonge & Steeles Ave., Toronto). Tavern here or and/or Vaughan. Sold 20.
    . 1819 Aug. As a lieutenant he was granted 1000 Acres & an additional 400 Acres from his wife, Mary Willson.
    * 1796 May 28, Cousin John Brown Lawrence presented Richard's land grant to his friend Gov. Simcoe:
    . 1796 July 30, already built on it: 18 Duke Street, TOWN OF YORK. Today 179 King St. East, Toronto Downtown.
    . 1796 8 Oct - Granted & lots in Vaughan, (just across the road from his Lot 25, Con 1 Yonge.) Steeles & Yonge Streets, tavern here or and/or at Vaughan.

    . 1797 Minutes of the Town of York: Richd. Lawrence: 2 males & 4 females.Total six.
    i.e. Ricd. & wife Mary & John, Mary, Marg., Eliz. & Mary Anne Lawrence.
    Note10: Town of York had only 52 males & 34 females living on Yonge St., Toronto.

    . Two Surveys of Settlers actually living on Yonge Street:
    . 1797 Aug 3, York, Lot No. 25 East, 5 Acres cleared, Richard Lawrence is on the premises.

    . 1797 Jun 27 - Oath saying he knew Sarah Lakerman, wife of John Wilson, Jur & that her father died within the British lines in the year 1776. Signed, Richd. Lawrence.

    . 1798 June. Lot 25 East, Richard Lawrence, i.e. He is living on the lot) Four acres cleared. Small log house. Surveyed by David W Smith, Esq., Surveyor Genera.l { Is Wm. L. Willson, his brother-in-law on the adjacent lot, actually living with his sister Mrs. Mary Lawrence? - PJA.]

    . 1802 Jan 12, Tuesday Richard Lawrence (7th) sworn to Petty Jury of 12 men. John Evenor the accused. When the miller was absent, John Evenor was seen taking a sheep away from the barn yard. Discharged because no Prosecutor was present.

    . 1805 Mar 2. Richard Lawrence of Yonge St. who had received a license to keep a Tavern for House, at his dwelling house & who had removed from thence to another Public house; applied for leave to keep a Tavern under the same license in the house to which he had removed. The court do not find themselves authorized to comply with this request as they deem the License to be attached to the house recognize has been taken & not to any other.
    Note11: 1804 Feb 1. Richard sells Lot 3, Con 4, Vaughan Twp. property. Coincidence?

    . 1807 Jul 24 - Justice Robt. Thorpe's address, Summary: Whereas a goodly number of Independent Electors convented for discussing the sufferings whose situation was resplendent by many not his friends to be very deplorable of his losses which at first he yielding to their entreaties to represent them in Parliament in UC or England. A multitude of signatures, inc. Joseph Shepard, Richd. Lippincott, Alex. Montgomery, Baron Fred. DeHoen, Peter Muscleman, John Van Zantee, John Willson, [most likely junior] William L Willson, Stillwell Willson, James Finch. Richard Lawrence, William Johnson, George Taylor Denison, J Hale, Walter Moody, Peter Whitney, Garret Van Zantee, Sam D Cozens, Peter Winter.
    Ref: Report on dn Archives, 1892.

    . Ely started early. John Powell & Geo. Ridout soon overhauled me - fed at Buttanans? 18 miles - at Lawrence 17 miles, went on to Cantfields 11: a little after dark.
    . 1809 Sep 29th - John Arnold & Ely Playter drew a load of ashes from [Richard] Lawrence's the AM. 47 bushels.
    Ref: Ely Players Diary.

    . 1815 Dec 30. Richard Lawrence received a Tavern License for Township of York. £12, Issuer James Kerr.

    . 1818 Dec 26, Quarterly Session of Peace, Charlottesville, London District
    $2 Costs of Court The said Sum for Wages to the said Alvin.
    Ordered that as the License is Left in the behest? of the Magistrates all persons being desirous of keeping publick houses are required to attend on the last Saturday of this month precisely at 10 in the forenoon at which time the Bonds will be ready for signature, as an Act of the Legislature has passed to that effect.
    The Court took into consideration the Tavern Bills & agreed as follows.:
    Richd. Lawrence £3.10s & Wm. Lawrence £3.

    Extracts from HIS CHILDREN'S LAND PETITION RICHARD LAWRENCE:
    . 1818 Apr 14, Richard Lawrence is now in Woodhouse*, Ontario, daughter Margaret Lawrence.
    . 1818 August 6, Mary Ann is with her parents at Long Pointe, Ontario.
    . 1819 October 13, Richard is in Woodhouse now, wrote daughter Elizabeth Osborn-Tarbox-Lawrence.
    . 1819 Aug 20 - Richard Lawrence sells West ½ Lot 25, Con 1 ESY for £350.
    . 1820 April 11 & 20th, He is now in Charlotteville, London District, (Norfolk County).
    . 1821 Feb 21, Sold Vaughan Twp. property of his wife, Mary Willson.
    Note12: Woodhouse is now called Naticoke.

    . 1828 - Photo of large wooden mill: Lot 1, Con. 2 East. Markham Township. Bayview Ave & Steeles Ave. Fish Mill, NE corner Steeles & Bayview in 1961. This grist & saw mill was built in 1830 by Benjamin Fish, next to the distillery that he owned (built 1828). Though the original mill was destroyed in a fire, Fish built a new one on the same site. Demolished in 1965, when the intersection of Bayview & Steeles was widened.
    . The Town of Charlotteville:* When the war of 1812 broke out the court-house was used for barrack purposes, ... was christened" Fort Norfolk." The court house, jail, the fort & the tavern of Job Loder all stood on the elevation above the flat. A hotel was built under the hill & kept by a man named Hatch. In 1833, during the cholera scare*, a hospital was built at this place. It stood on the bank & was a barn-like structure & was used but little, if at all, for the purpose for which it was built. The old Town of Charlotteville reached the zenith of its glory during the war. In 1815 the District Courts were removed to Vittoria & the Town of Charlotteville relapsed into Turkey Point once more. No traces of its old-time importance remain, save a few surface irregularities indicating the spot occupied by the fort. The dreary waste at Turkey Point was, for 13 years, the judicial metropolis for all this vast region of country.
    Ref: Pioneer sketches of Long Point Settlement. Published 1908.
    Note13: Was this the cause of Richard Lawrence's disappearance? Note14: *Charlotteville is now called Delhi.

    . 1831 May 3 - DECEASED of London District, wrote son, Richd. Lawrence, and also deceased was an Innkeeper, deceased per Jane Lawrence.
    . 1846 Smith's Canadian Gazetter, Province of Canada West:
    Harwich, Kent Co, Western District, soil extremely fertile, 1898 inhabitants. Timber - white oak, black walnut, maple, beech, hickory, basswood etc.

    A more complete history with copies of ALL documents & photos may be found at North York Public Library, Toronto under Richard Lawrence, John Willson & John Brown Lawrence of New Jersey, NB & Ontario. By P J Ahlberg, May 2009. - - -

    Birth:
    Monday. Upper Freehold Twp.

    Richard married Mary WILLSON, DUE est 1786 in New Brunswick, Canada. Mary (daughter of John WILLSON, .1, Sur. and Rebeka Thixton THICKSON(E)) was born est 1770 in Piscataway Twp., Middlesex Co., New Jersey; died est 21 Feb 1821 ± in Charlotteville, Norfolk Co., Ontario. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Mary WILLSON, DUE was born est 1770 in Piscataway Twp., Middlesex Co., New Jersey (daughter of John WILLSON, .1, Sur. and Rebeka Thixton THICKSON(E)); died est 21 Feb 1821 ± in Charlotteville, Norfolk Co., Ontario.

    Notes:

    . Richard Lawrence's New Brunswick Land Petitions indicate he was single March 1786 at Queensborough & married by August 1789 on the Miramichi. They could have been married by her father, a Justice of the Peace for Miramichi, or perhaps by an Anglican Minister in transit on the Miramichi, who had baptized a Willson child [Jonathan Willson 1783 & John Willson.III, born 1791?]
    Further Research: However, also retained for further search: St. Andrews Church, Long Island. 1780 Oct 5, Married, Lawrence Mary & Lawrence, Richard. Vol. xxx, Page 56. This seems this would be too early for this Mary Willson.

    . UC Land Petition 63, L Bundle 4 c 1808 p241
    York, daughter of John Willson, [MARY WILLSON,] Richard Lawrence.
    . To His Honor Peter Russell, Esq., president of the Government of Upper Canada etcetcetc. In Council:
    The Petition of Richard Lawrence of the Township of York. Humbly shows That your Petitioner is a Loyalist & came from Nova Scotia about 3 years ago, [1794] that he is married to Mary, the daughter of John Willson, Esq. of Kings Mills on the Humber, who is also a Loyalist. That your Petitioner's wife having never received any Land, your Petitioner prays your Honor would be pleased to grant him 200 Acres in right of his said confer & is in duty bound your Petitioner will ever pray.
    Richard Lawrence, York, 22 June, 1797.
    Envelope: Ordered 200 Acres to wife of Petitioner as DUE, 1778 Dec 24. [Daughter of an Empire Loyalist.]

    Ontario Land Registry Abstract Vaughan Book 185,
    Lot 1, Con 3, Vaughan Book 185, p4
    . 1802 May 17, Patent, Crown, to Mary Lawrence, All 200 A
    . 1821 Feb 21, B&S, Richard Lawrence et ux, to John Guthrie, £100, All.

    Note1: As of 2018 this land is now 1900 Steeles Ave. West, Fairbanks Lumber Co., Concord, Vaughan Twp., York Co., Ontario. As of 2018 this land is now 1900 Steeles Ave. West, Fairbanks Lumber Co., Concord, Vaughan Twp., York Co., Ontario. -PJA

    Note2: Husband Richd. Lawrence had other land at Lot 1 Con 4, also the adjacent, Lot 25 across on Yonge St in York Township. In others words, all located on Steeles Avenue: First East at Yonge & Steeles to Dufferin St.]

    . 1801 Children's schoolhouse, Condition of Yonge Street:
    Lot No. 25 west & east complied with, Lot 25 East Side of Yonge Street; nothing done to the street & a schoolhouse erected in the centre of the street. This is the end of the Township of York.
    Ref: Report to Surveyor-General D W Smith on the condition of Yonge Street in 1801, by John Stegmann, formerly a Hessian officer.
    . On page 427 of Scadding's memoirs, he tells us that Elisha Pease taught in this early schoolhouse.
    XReference: E. Pease was a witness of the WILL of John Willson, Jur. in 1818 & also John Johnston, 1852.
    Note3: The schoolhouse was built in the road allowance in front of the Lawrence's property so the children could find it & not getting lost in the woods. Just a few lots away, Jacob Cummer tells us a black bear was digging up his garden. - PJ Ahlberg.

    . DAUGHTER & WIFE of a TAVERN KEEPER:
    Mary Willson Lawrence & her children, had much experience at Taverkeeping. Husband Richard Lawrence held a UC licensed tavern located on Yonge Street north. She & her friend, as noted below, Mary Thompson visited Miss Elizabeth Russel when Thompson was employed by the sister of THE most prominent & powerful man in Upper Canada. From extracted stories from Ely Playter's Journal we may see what life was like a woman tavenkeeper in early Upper Canada:
    . 1806 Jan 11 - Thinking it was a tavern, Ely Playter & a companion mistakenly stopped & stayed over night at Mr. Miller's house. Implicit in the mistake at Millers & throughout his journal, is a parallel understanding that household life intersected with public life in taverns.

    . 1802 May 2 & Sept 29 - Mary Thomson*, Playter's journal's Miss T - also lived at his house. She was the daughter of a substantial farm family from Scarborough Township. Her father, Archibald, was a master stonemason & a Justice of the peace from 1806. Nothing about her presentation in the journal suggests less than respectable young womanhood. It is difficult to account for her presence in the tavern rather than on her family's farm. [Scaboro Museum, 2016]. Certainly not a servant in the house, she socialized within the same circles as the tavern-keeper & came & went as she pleased.
    Playter mentioned her almost exclusively in the parlour usually in the context of polite sociability, but once he noted, I seated myself by the Parlour fire & finished my letters to Mr & Mrs Rogers, it was one o'clock in the morning before I retired to bed. Miss T sat at her work till I had finished writing. This brief reference & others, imply Mary Thompson may have worked in the textile trade from Playter's tavern & continued so working after marrying John Scarlett of the Humber. Tavern-keepers placed tea tables in their parlours. Nor did anything about the emphatically public nature of their homes work to exclude the women of tavern-keeping households from local networks of female friendship & association:
    The Tavernkeepers' daughters, Player saw Miss Beman, the Miss Jarvises, & Miss Robinson on their way home as they had been visiting & he gave my Sister's Compliments to her as they had requested in their letter" In their taverns these women crafted a female space for sociability, into which they also welcomed men.
    Ref: Women, Men, & Taverns in Tavern-Keeper Ely Playter's Journal, by Julia Roberts, Guelph.
    Note4: Mary Thomson's husband-to-be, John Scarlett was granted in 1817 Apr 2, Lot 19, south side of Richmond, that is across the street from husband Richard Lawrence. Ref: Town of York Abstracts, p263.

    . 1837 - Toronto & Home District:
    . 1799 - Population 224; 1800 - Population 1127. 1818 - Population 8,459.

    Date & place of burial of Mary Willson Lawrence is unknown. Last known whereabouts of Mary Lawrence was noted in her daughter Mary Ann Lawrence's UC Marriage Bond of 10 August 1819, where permission to marry was obtained at Long Point in southern Ontario. Rebecca Lawrence says her father died when she was very young & she was reared by an older sister, implying perhaps that Mary Willson was dead between 1821 & 1831 when her husband died & thus making Rebecca about 16 years of age - not so 'very young'.

    Richard Lawrence was an inn keeper in the Long Pointe to Harwich, Ontario, until his death about another 1 years later, about 1831.

    A separate Willson Family Tree may be found at Ontario Ancestor; & also Rootsweb.com: John Willson of New Jersey & the Kings' Mill, Ontario. - - -

    Birth:
    Alt DOB: Est 1765 -1769.

    Died:
    Alt Loc: Harwich, Kent Co., Ontario

    Children:
    1. Elizabeth LAWRENCE, .13, DUE was born est 1795 ± in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario; died after 4 Jan 1865 in Ontario, Canada; was buried .
    2. Margaret LAWRENCE, .5 DUE was born est 1797 in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario; died on 3 Jun 1842 in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario; was buried in 1842 in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Potter's Field, Toronto.
    3. John LAWRENCE, SUE, The .xii was born in 1798 in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario; died Est. before 30 Oct 1837 in Gosfield, Nissouri Twp., Essex Co., Ontario.
    4. Maryann LAWRENCE, .8th, DUE was born est 1800 in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario; died est before 13 Nov 1834 in Toronto, York Co., Ontario.
    5. Daniel Tilton LAWRENCE, .IV SUE was born on 15 Aug 1805 in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario; died on 15 Aug 1887 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried on 16 Aug 1887 in Morton Hill Cemetery.
    6. Richard S LAWRENCE, Jr., .8th, SUE was born in 1809 in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario; died on 21 Nov 1864 in Louisville, Jefferson Co., Kentucky; was buried in Morton Hill Cemetery.
    7. Jane E LAWRENCE, , DUE was born on 20 Jan 1811 in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario; died on 23 Aug 1873 in St. Joseph, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried in Morton Hill Cemetery.
    8. 3. Hadassah HESTER LAWRENCE, DUE was born on 21 Sep 1812 in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario; died on 4 Jan 1888 in Benton Harbor, Berrien Co., Michigan; was buried in Morton Hill Cemetery.
    9. Rebecca LAWRENCE, DUE was born on 4 May 1815 in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario; died on 17 Feb 1890 in Ganges, Allegan Co., Michigan; was buried in Taylor Cemetery.
    10. FAMILY TREE LAWRENCE - WILLSON, SUMMARY


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John Solomon TEETZEL, .1 was born on 27 Feb 1762 in Colbourg, Upper Saxony, Germany; died on 4 Dec 1836 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; was buried in Palermo United Cemetery.

    Notes:

    Lived - Upper Saxony & Kirchensittenbach, Germany 1762 - 1780
    German Valley & Sussex County (Hardwick Township), New Jersey 1780 - 1800
    Grimsby, Upper Canada 1800 - 1820.
    Palermo, Upper Canada 1820 - 1836.

    . 1825 Trafalgar Twp. Assessment, Halton Co. Gore District Lot29 NDS Con 2.
    Number in family 9, John S Teetsell, 40 cultivated & 60 uncultivated acres.

    . John Solomon Teetzel was born in the city of Cobourg, Upper Saxony, Germany, 27 February, 1762. The record in his Bible, tran­scribed from the German by Francis Teetzel, Milwaukee, Wis., in1868, gives 1780 as the year he came to America. …The beautifully carved & lettered sand­ stones which mark the graves in early burying grounds & churchyards
    in this district are part of his work. Many of them, standing the test of time & marked by there letter T, may be seen in St. Andrew's churchyard, Grimsby.
    John Solomon was also active in the life of the community. He served on the Grimsby township council as one of 2 Assessors in 1803, as Assessor in 1805, as Collector in 1807, as Town Warden in 1810, as Assessor in 1811, 1812 & 1813, as Collector in 1814-15 & lastly as ASSESSOR in 1818. At about this time he sold his property in Grimsby & moved to Palermo, Halton County where he died in 1836.
    Ref: Annals of the Forty, Vol 9, 1958.

    John Solomon Teetzel was born in Saxe Cobourg Gotha, Upper Saxony, Germany on February 27, 1762. While attending college, being educated for the Roman Catholic priesthood, he ran away to America. Apparently for this action he was disinherited, as the family was later declared extinct. The family had long been associated with the Catholic Church. When he left Germany, he had 2 sisters still living at home & he was the youngest son of the family.

    The trip to America was very rough & the ship was wrecked off the east coast. He eventually landed in New Jersey in 1780. He married Rachael Von Till on November 5, 1786, & they settled in German Valley, New Jersey. German Valley no longer exists, but was a village in Washington Township, Morris County on the south branch of the Raritan River & High Bridge Branch of the New Jersey Central Railway. It is near Vethlehem, Pennsylvania.
    Rachael died in Grimsby on March 20, 1813 & is probably buried in the Grimsby cemetery, along with an infant daughter who died in 1805. At this time the family moved to Palermo, Ontario & John Solomon married Mary Campbell, widow of James Campbell. They had 6 children, but only 3 lived to see adulthood. John Solomon was 63 years of age when his last daughter was born & her Monument was hand carved by her father. It is still standing in the Palermo cemetery today in 1994.

    When the Scottish merchant Hon. Robt. Hamilton died at the port of Queenston, a fascinating inventory was immediately taken of his goods & debts owning to him at Queenston, Ontario as at his death on March 14, 1809: John Sol. Teetzel owned £31. 7 shillings 3 pence.

    . The detailed inventory includes seven pages of all the goods available for the rugged life on the Niagara frontier. Or perhaps the pioneer stopped by for a wee drop from the 37 barrels of whiskey & other spirits on hand. About 850 people from the Niagara area are listed in a clear hand as borrowing a grand total of £62,729 from Robt. Hamilton. - P J Ahlberg 2009.
    Ref: Estate file of Late Hon. Robert Hamilton, Queenston MS 639. R 50.

    . 1794 Feb 24 Kunkele /Cougle & Cunkle, John Jr. of Hardwick Sussex, New Jersey. Admr. Philip Kunke signs Philip Cougle.
    Fellow bondsman Adam Kunke; both of the said place. Lib 35, p 181
    1794 Feb 20 Inventory £69 made by Conrad Arwine & John S Teetzel
    Ref: NJ File 589S.

    . War of 1812: Board of Claims for Losses
    John S. Teetzell, Grimsby, Claim 443 & 1242. Arms taken by the Enemy £6.5s. Attendance on two wounded American Officers £6.5s. Amount claimed £12 10s. Remarks: The claimant has dehorsd? to this claim. Refection not of a nature to affect Claim. [No amount recommended.]
    . Claim 1242. Claimed £12 10s. Paid £3.
    . Voucher 35-1393, 15s Halifax currency, signed, John S Teetzel by this attorney, James Middleburg.

    Statement of Loses during the War with the USA, remaining paid: dated at 1842 Sept 30 - John Teetzel, Grimsby, £1.19s. - - -
    Ref: Journals of Legislative Assembly of Canada

    GRAVE NOTES
    Note1: 1827 Oct 28, John S Teetzel*, Wm. Kennedy, John T. Westfall, Stephen Clink were witnesses to the WILL of John McCutcheon, Lot 7, Con 5, Erin Twp., Wellington County.

    *Note2: In 1827 John S Teetzel was living at Palemro, Halton County, which was quite a distance from John McCutcheon's home in Erin Township. The Will was signed, at Erin Township; two witnesses are also from Erin Twp., & Westall [of Elmira, Waterloo Co] was closer to Teetzel. Rev. Stephen Clink These 3 men were German.
    The Irish men, Kennedy [of Lot 11, Con. 5, Erin Twp.] & McCutcheon were in-laws.
    Was Teetzel also commissioned at the same time to make the monument for McCutcheon? If John McCutcheon's gravestone is ever located, it should be possible to determine John S Teetzel distinctive chisel markings. - PJ Ahlberg, 2017.

    There is a book written on him:
    John Solomon Teetzel & the Anglo-German Gravestone carving Tradition of Eighteen-Century Northwestern New Jersey. Markers. Written by Richard Veit in 2000.
    Suggestion of the possibility of Teetzel's handwork: Charles Roszel, b 1740 died 1817, red sandstone monument most certainly imported from New Jersey.
    . Monument of Charles Roszel, 1742-1817 Gainsborough, Ontario, buried St. Ann's Presbyterian Church cemetery. Notes on the monument: Typical style of a New Jersey monuments. The monument could have been chisel in New Jersey. The Monument is by stone carver John Solomon Teetzel, marked with his signature "T" on the bottom. Teetzel was a fellow German who left New Jersey for Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario.

    Research & transcriptions by PJ Ahlberg 2013. Thank you. - - -

    Birth:
    Village of Kirchensittenbach.

    Died:
    [ Palermo is near Milton, Ontario. ]

    Buried:

    John married Rachel VANTILL on 5 Nov 1786 in New Jersey. Rachel was born on 5 Nov 1786 in Washington Twp., Morris Co., New Jersey; died on 20 Mar 1813 in Grimsby, Lincoln Co., Ontario; was buried in Upper Thirty Cemetery. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Rachel VANTILL was born on 5 Nov 1786 in Washington Twp., Morris Co., New Jersey; died on 20 Mar 1813 in Grimsby, Lincoln Co., Ontario; was buried in Upper Thirty Cemetery.

    Notes:

    Children of John Teetzel & Rachel Van Till are:

    1. Charles Frederick Teetzel, b. 10 Sep 1787, Sussex County, New Jersey , U.S.A.; d. 18 Oct 1856, or 19th, Milton, Trafalgar Township, Halton County, Canada West, Mary Tufford, 19 July, 1810.
    2. Susannah Teetzel, b. 05 Aug 1789, Sussex Co., NJ, d. 29 Dec 1858, Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario, married Lawrence Hagar in 1808 at Grimsby.

    3. Elizabeth Teetzel, b. 13 Jun 1791, Sussex Co., NJ, d. 01 Sep 1864, Grimsby, Ont., m. Mathias Book, 2 Dec., 1808, at Grimsby.

    4. Julia AnnTeetzel, b. 11 Mar 1793, Sussex Co., NJ, d. 02 Feb 1864, Orford Township, Palmyra, Kent Co., Ontario. married Jacob Street, 30 October, 1815.

    5. Johnathan Johnston Teetzel, b. 22 Aug 1795, Sussex Co., NJ, d. 17 Jan 1873, Fingal, Southwold Twp., Elgin Co., Ontario, in. Mary Lawrence, 1 January, 1817 at Grimsby. They settled at Southwold, Col. Talbot's settlement.

    6. John Solomon Teetzel, b. 01 Sep 1797, Sussex Co., NJ, d. Abt. 1848, Orford Twp., Kent Co., Ontario, married Hannah Havens at Grimsby, 6 July, 1820. He lived near Palermo, Halton County.
    7. Annie Christine Teetzel, b. 12 Sep 1799; d. 1870, Morpeth, Howard Twp., Kent Co., Ontario, m. John Adair, 25 Sept., 1816. They lived in Clinton township.
    8. David William Teetzel, b. 26 Jul 1802, Grimsby, Lincoln County, Upper Canada; d. 02 Jun 1877, East Zora Township, Oxford Co., Ontario. They settled a few miles north of Woodstock, Ont. Descendants live in Los Angeles, California.

    9. Rachel Teetzel, b.8 Dec 1804, Grimsby, Lincoln Co., Ontario; d. 09 Jan 1805, Town of Grimsby, Lincoln Co. Ontario. Burial: St. Andrews Anglican Church Cemetery, Grimsby.

    10. Mary Teetzel, b. 21 Feb 1806, Grimsby, Lincoln Co., Ontario; d. 09 Mar 1835, Palermo, Halton Co., Ontario, married Joseph Simons, 5 Feb 1823, d. Mar 1835, buried at Palermo
    11. Margaret Teetzel, b. 05 Nov 1808, Grimsby, Lincoln Co., Ontario; d. 23 Apr 1850, Palmyra, Orford Twp., Canada West, married Joseph Everley.
    12. Joseph Teetzel, b. 12 Jun 1812, Grimsby, Lincoln Co., Ontario; d. 15 Jun 1856, age 44 yrs, 3 days, Palmyra, Orford Twp., Kent County, Canada West. TWIN TO:
    13. Sarah Teetzel, b. 12 Jun 1812, Grimsby, Lincoln Co., Ontario; d. 03 Jan 1861, age 48 yrs, 6 months, 21 days, Palymra, Orford Twp., Kent Co. Ontario.

    . 1887 Aug 26 - J V Teeter, lawyer & David Dexter Mag. director of the Central Life Insurance co., both of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, arrived here today. These gentleman have just returned from a trip to Winnipeg where they spent several weeks. In conversation with Mr. Teetzel gave some interesting facts in relations to the feeling in Manitoba over the efforts of the dominion government to prevent the people of the province from building a railroad that all be a competitor of the Canadian Pacific.
    While the people there are determined to build the new road if they have to protect their work with bayonets, they propose to insist first on their rights in a civil manner. It is the opinion of many of the best lawyers that Manitoba was incorporated as a prince prior to the granting of the Cdn. Pacific subsidy by the Gov. Manitoba's never lost the power to control the granting of railway franchises within its own boundaries. … Mr. Teetzel says Manitoba is a fine country and will have a great future before it when the transportation question is settled. He says the crops are very late this year, grain promising 30 to 35 bushels per acre. One farmer near Portage La Prairie, 60 miles west of Winnipeg, whom he say, said that he would get an average of 35 bushels per acre from his 800 acre farm.
    Ref: Daily Inter Ocean Newspaper, Chicago, Illinois.

    INHERITANCE HUNTING:

    . 1888 Feb 4 - Want column:
    $100 Reward will be paid for discovery of original record of marriage of John Solomon Teetzel to Rachel Van Sill (or Van Tile) in 1786, in New Jersey; locality not known, but supposed to be "Log Jail." Address J. V. Teetzel, Hamilton, Canada.
    Ref: Trenton Evening Times Newspaper, New Jersey.
    Note: Hamilton, Wentworth Co., Ontario is near the general area of the Teetzel original settlement in (Tarfalgar Twp.) Canada.

    . 1888 Feb 12 -The heirs of the Teetzel estate of several millions of dollars have formed themselves into a regular organization at Benton Harbors to secure their rights. Their agent is now in Germany to claim the estate for them.
    Ref: Sault Ste. Marie News, Michigan

    . 1899 Jan 3, Toronto, Ont. Jan 2. Municipal elections were held throughout Ontario today. Mayors elected: Hamilton, J V Teetzel.
    Ref: Duluth News Tribune, Minnesota.

    . 1903 May 12 Their Good FortuneSix heirs of $50,00 left by the late Geo G todd, who recently died in Hamilton Canada, Deceased was a half brother of their father, the late Parley Hunge. Mr. Hung has just returned from hamilton & Illinois were deceased was buried. He was ably assisted in establishing the claim by J V Teetzel, K.C. of the firm of Teetzel, Harris & Lewis barrister of Hamilton.
    Ref. Cornell Evening Tribune, New York. - - -

    Birth:
    Alt Name: Rachel Von Till.

    Buried:
    Grimsby, Ontario.

    Children:
    1. 4. Charles Frederick TEETZEL, Sr. was born on 10 Sep 1787 in Harwick Twp., Sussex Co., New Jersey; died on 10 Oct 1856 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; was buried in Palermo United Cemetery.
    2. Jonathan Johnson TEETZEL was born on 22 Aug 1795 in Harwick Twp., Sussex Co., New Jersey; died on 17 Jan 1873 in Southwold Twp., Elgin Co., Ontario; was buried in Fingal Cemetery.
    3. Anna Christine TEETZEL was born on 12 Sep 1799 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died in 1875 in Wisconsin.
    4. David William TEETZEL was born on 25 Jul 1802 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died on 2 Jun 1877 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario.
    5. Mary TEETZEL was born on 21 Feb 1806 in Grimsby, Lincoln Co., Ontario; died on 5 Mar 1835 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; was buried in Palermo United Cemetery.
    6. Charles W TEETZEL, .2 was born on 6 Apr 1836 in Palermo, Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died on 29 Jan 1901 in Lynn Twp., St. Clair Co., Michigan; was buried on 1 Feb 1901 in Lynn Twp. Cemetery.

  3. 12.  William LAWRENCE, .6 Esq. The Quaker was born on 13 Nov 1719 in Colts Neck, Monmouth Co., New Jersey (son of Richard LAWRENCE, .3rd, Esq. and Alice BROWN); died on 21 Oct 1795 in Upper Freehold, Monmouth Co., New Jersey; was buried in Shrewsburys Friend's Burying Ground.

    Notes:

    . "I have an old English Bible with the record of birth, marriage, etc. of Richard (5), son of above William (4) & all but 2 of his children & all I need to make a legal connection is the WILL of William (4). Anyone wishing information that I have on the Lawrence family of New Jersey is welcome to it.
    Walter A. Hamilton, Grand Rapids, Michigan, Reprinted in Boston Transcripts. [who has the Bible now?]

    . 1748 May 5 - Margaret Tilton (J4-17); married William Lawrence, son of Richard Lawrence. Tilton Family in America.
    . 1748 May 5 - Margaret Tilton married, at the house of Daniel Tilton, William, son of Richard & Alice Lawrence; both of Middletown, born Dec. 13, 1719.

    Shrewsbury Monthly Meetings:
    . 1761 May 6, The Meeting is informed that William Lawrence, of Middletown has of late purchased a negro. John Burdin & Jacob Condis is appointed to x at with him & inform our next Meeting hear whether he is disposed to make satisfaction.
    . 1761 Mar 2 - William Lawrence declines making satisfaction for buying a negro by letting her free. Therefore this Meeting of the Yearly Meeting desires to acquaint him the rite of appeal.

    . 1748 Mar 2, William Lawrence: Three days before his marriage to Margaret Tilton he made application to the Men's Monthly Meeting, Shrewsbury, for a certificate of removal to Philadelphia. Ref: p. 417, Vol. 3.

    . Colts Neck has been noted for its horse breeding farms since the 1700's. ... In the springtime we are conscious of our heritage. The fields are green with young corn, potatoes & garden goodness. The orchards begin the ripeness of the apples. Hundreds of foals feed on the rich forage & from upland to lowland we know that snug in these fine houses, rich with the history of this land, we are at home.

    . William Lawrence & his Jacob Lawrence (1757-1823) were for many years coffin makers of Middletown Twp., Monmouth.
    Ref: Vol. 17, #13, Page 68 Jul 1942.

    1757 Aug 6, Will of Mary Cox, widow of Thomas, of Upper Freehold, Monmouth co, 86 years of age, Son this. Grandchildren, Eliz & Rebecca Cox. Names T Van Horn; Jos & Mary Lawrence: Elizabeth. Hutchinson. Legacy to Baptist ch; Wit: Sm. Liming & William Lawrence.

    Shrewsbury Monthly Meeting
    1744 Oct 1, Mary Tilton; second intentions, Burlington Meeting, ,
    married, Oct. 10, 1744, Job Ridgway, Jr., of Little Egg Harbor, son of Thomas.
    Witnesses: Daniel, Margaret, Sarah & Phebe Tilton, [i.e. her sisters.]

    . 1748 Mar 5 - William Lawrence of Middletown & Margaret Tilton of the same place, married at an appointed Meeting at Daniel Tilton's House.

    1748. William Lawrence, John Lawrence of U.F. (Upper Freehold) large pair of saddle bags delivered by John McConnel at John Formans funeral.
    Ref: Names of persons mentioned in Samuel Holmes His Book of Accounts.

    . 1758, William Lawrence, Accessed for land in Upper Freehold.

    ACCOUNT BOOK OF WILLIAM LAWRENCE, 1756-1817: 1 Vol. (190 p.)
    Lawrence of Middletown, N. J. was a blacksmith & a carpenter & also sold meats. Accounts by customer, mostly payments for services rendered. Also mentions selling coffins (one for a "negro" Daniel Polhemus, Nov. 1791).
    The Account Book has a note "Independence declared July 4 1776. Peace 1783" towards end of volume.
    Ref: Reprinted in Monmouth County Coffin Accounts of William & Jacob Lawrence 1756-1808, Genealogical Magazine of NJ, Vol 24 3.1949 Jul, p6-70, by Chas C Garner

    . Bequest form the WILL of William Lawrence, of Middletown, Monmouth Co. NJ. Grandson, William, son of Richard Lawrence, deceased, 36 acres at Barnegat, being part of Thomas Cooper's lot.
    Ref: Account book 1756-1817 Manuscript Collection 296., Monmouth County Historical Association.
    Note1: See attached story on Wm Lawrence, Quaker Carpenter.

    . 1776 Aug 29 -British Troops at Middletown:
    "Very near the present settlement of Middletown there lived … On the morning of August 29th the British light dragoons from Jamaica [NY City]
    scoured Newtown, "& while it was yet early," wrote Riker, in his "Annals of Newtown," "guided by one George Rapelye, a loyalist, came along the poor bowery & halted at Jacobus Lent's (late Isaac Rapelye's) to get some bread. Brandishing their naked swords they declared that they were in pursuit of that dx d rebel, Dr. Riker.

    . The doctor had spent the night in visiting different sections of the town & tearing down Howe's proclamations, that none might be mislead & induced at this critical juncture to remain & accept British protection instead of hastening to the support of the American arms. The females at Mr. Lent's were terrified at the ferocious appearance of the light horse &, observing the greediness with which they broke & ate the dry bread, Blanche, a colored woman, innocently inquired of her mistress whether they would not eat them. They dashed off toward Hell Gate, but the doctor had escaped in a boat to Barn Island & thus eluded the demons in human form." August 31st General Robertson, in command of a British force, was marching from Brooklyn, via Bedford & Cripplebush, to Hell Gate to oppose General Lee, who was reported to be landing there with an army.

    . When he arrived at Hallett's Cove, finding no enemy, he took up his quarters at William Lawrence's place (known later as Whitfield's & Halsey's) & encamped his army of 10,000 in tents on the hill & in Hallett's lot. At that time nearly the whole English army was within a few miles of there. Says Riker:
    "The East River now only separated these hostile legions of Britain & the army of Washington. Indeed, no sooner had General Robertson made an encampment at Hell Gate & his cannon arrived than a battery was planted on a point of l& at Hallett's Cove, which opened on Sunday September 1st at Horn's Hook, on New York island & being returned in a spirited manner an incessant firing was kept up on both sides the whole day, during which the enemy threw above a hundred shells, killing one of our men & wounding several. Some of the American shot fell on the land of William Lawrence, but it is not known what damage the British sustained. This cannonading continued for several days, by which the enemy were so emboldened that on Tuesday they crossed in considerable numbers to Blackwell's Island, but the shot from our batteries proving too warm for them they soon recrossed the river."

    In the meantime the British troops made frequent incursions upon the contiguous portions of the island & a number of residents of Whig proclivities were made prisoners & subjected to detention & indignity. General Robertson's army, a little after the middle of September, vacated Hell Gate, which was invested by the Hessians under General De Heister, who in company with General Clark was quartered in the house of William Lawrence. The Hessians remained three weeks & then left to join in the movement against New York.

    Middletown Twp., Monmouth Co., New Jersey Tax List: William Lawrence
    . 1778 March & November, December; 1779 Jan., March, Dec.
    . 1781 August; 1784 May; 1785 June-July; 1786 June-July; 1787 July; 1789 July-August
    . 1790 August; 1792 Jun, July, August, Freehold Twp., Monmouth Co., NJ, William Lawrence.

    . 1779 Feb 24, Month. Whereas inquisitions have been found & final judgement entered, hereon, in favour of the State of NJ against there persons herein mentioned: Notice is hereby given that the real & personal estates belonging to Thos. Leonard, Hendrick Vanmater, James Boggs, William Lawrence, Richard Lippencott, Elisha Lawrence & John Lawrence, sons of John, late of Upper Freehold, will be sold at public venue, beginning on Monday 5 April next, at Wall's mills & continue from day to day until all are sold. No credit will be given. Signed, Samuel Forman, Joseph Lawrence, Commissioners, Feb 17. 1779.
    Ref: New Jersey Gazette, Trenton, NJ.

    Verify idenity: . 1780 2 mo. 7day Shrewsbury. From the Preparative Meeting, it appears John Lawrence's son of William has been fighting formerly & since has bore arms in a hostile way, has left his habitation gone where he can't readily be treated with for which offenses this Meeting hath hereby disowned him from being a member thereof. [p525 /film p226].

    British Headquarters Papers (Carleton Papers or American Manuscripts):
    Ensign William Lawrence, 1st NJV, (Skinner's Brigade)
    . 1779, Return of Troops, New York, Page 10436 (58), Film 369, Item 31699.

    . TAX LISTS for years: 1778 Mar - Nov; 1778 Dec - Nov; 1779 Mar - Jan; 1779 Oct-Jan Lists;
    1785; 1881 Aug; 1784 May; 1785 Jun - July; 1785 July; 1786 Jun; 1789 Jul/Aug - Jul; 1787 Jul Lists;
    & 1790 Aug - March; 1792 Ju/Aug - June; 1794 Jun Tax Lists: William Lawrence, Monouth County, Middletown Township.
    Ref: NJ Early Census Index.

    . 1785 Jul 5 - Letters remaining in the Post Office at Trenton: William Lawrence, Monmouth.
    Ref: New Jersey Gazette, published 1785 Aug 1.

    . 1787 Apr 9 - William Lawrence affirmed that Elizabeth M. Hartshorne & Hannah Herbert were daughters of Wm. Lawrence, his grandfather;
    & that Hugh Hartshorne was the eldest son of Elizabeth Hartshorne &
    the eldest son of Hannah Herbert, by her husband Obadiah Herbert.

    . 1795 Feb 20 - WILL of William Lawrence of Middletown Twp., Monmouth Co., Know all men by these present that I being now indisposed in body but of a sound & disposing will & memory I do now in order to dispose of what worldly estate I am now possessed of make & ordain this to be my last will & Testament as follows to wit. In the first place I give & bequeath unto
    Sons Richard & John, Daughter Elizabeth. £30 York money each;
    Daughter, Alice £50 [£30?] & 3 silver spoons;
    Son Elisha, feather bed I now lay on;
    Grandson, William, (son of son Elisha), 5 acres being a survey now in the hands of Richard Herbert, with a piece of meadow ground joining the east side of said lott said meadow ground lying together to the Northward of the over going place;
    Son Jacob, lott of salt meadow lying at Smocks Point containing about one acre & three quarters, 3 silver table spoons, 3 silver tea spoons & 1 silver tumbler, all home plantation, all cattle, farming utensils & remainder of estate, plantation whereon I now live on together with all the buildings improvements heridetaments (?) & appurtenances thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining.
    Executors: Son Jacob Lawrence & Stephen Stoutenburgh.
    Witnesses: Timothy Murphy, Daniel Covenhaven, Wm. Van Matter. Sworn at Freehold the 21st October 1795 before me, Jos. Scudder Surrogate.
    . Proved 21 Oct. 1795.
    . Son & Executor, Jacob Lawrence Affirmed, the 21st Oct, 1795 before me Jos' Scudder, Surrogate.
    . 1795 Mar 3 - Inventory £155.10.11 (also bond for £100 against Col. Asher & Obadiah & as yet unsettled; made by James Taylor, Wm. covert & T Murphy.
    Ref: NJ Wills, Lib 33, p.505. NJ. & NJ Index of Wills & Inventories, Vol. II 7261-7268M.

    . Historians generally concede that no state among the old 13 suffered during the Revolutionary War more than New Jersey & that no county in New Jersey suffered more than Monmouth. In addition to the outrages from the regular British army, our citizens were continually harassed by organized bands of refugees & by a set of outcasts known as "The Pine Woods robbers" who pretended to be Royalist yet if the opportunity arose, robbed Royalist as well as Americans. - - -

    Page 2

    . 1798 Sep 24 - Quaker Carpenter could Make Anything from Coffins to Mills:
    William Lawrence was a man of all work. The Quaker carpenter from Middletown Twp. & his boys were available for just about any sort of job - from building a mill to repairing a tea table- during the last half of the 18th century. Lawrence's account book, preserved at the Monmouth County Historical Association library in Freehold, gives minute details of work done for Middletown & Shrewsbury residents from 1756 until his death in 1795. It reveals that prior to 1771 he produced a number of pieces of furniture, making him one of the county's earliest known cabinetmakers.
    At the back of his account book Lawrence recorded that he was married May 5, 1748, to Margaret Tilton & their first child, Daniel, was born 2 years later. The marriage is recorded in the second book of Friend's Record's (Quaker) at Shrewsbury.

    That he was originally considered a carpenter is confirmed by the will of Joseph Field of Middletown in 1749. One of the witnesses was 'William Lawrence carpenter. Lawrence's plantation was located near Colts Neck Village. He willed this, his cattle & farm equipment to a son, Jacob, in 1795.

    Lawrence's accounts show sales of meat, grain & livestock to his customers in addition to charges for a wide variety of other services. He tanned hides, provided harvest help, constructed wells, built & repaired wagons, chaises & sleighs & was apparently a competent wheelwright. There are countless entries for coffins of bilsted (sweet gum), cherry, walnut & black walnut - many of them for children. Infant mortality was high in the 18th century.

    The names of 10 assistants or apprentices are listed in charges for labor in the account book. The last 5 named, between 1764 & 1784, are Daniel, William, Elisha, Jacob & John, which are the given names of 5 of 6 sons listed in a Lawrence family genealogy.

    Furniture made included six bedsteads, six tables of various types, two cases of draws (bureaus), a dressing table, a chest, several chairs, two cradles, a tea table & a desk. There also are numerous charges for furniture repairs. No examples of this furniture are known to have survived. Lawrence seems to have been strictly a country cabinetmaker who used only woods available locally. Maple, mahogany & other imported woods popular with city cabinetmakers are not mentioned. Lawrence's services were in considerable demand. In 1760, his crew put in 20 days work for Joseph Taylor in Upper Freehold Township - some 25 miles from home - probably building or finishing the interior of a house.

    One account is of particular interest. Lawrence & his boys did extensive work in 1764-65 for Michael Kearney, suggesting that they may have been the builders or interior finishers of the mansion house at Morrisdon Farm in Colts Neck, a fine colonial home that still is standing & was the subject of an Antiques column last year. Kearney apparently acquired the property in the 1760s & the first reference to Morrisdon Farm turned up in a 1767 horse breeding ad run by Kearney. Lawrence billed him for 36 days of labor over a 3 month period.

    . 1763, Lawrence charged Widow Mary Holmes, on July ye 18 to 1 day work to myself & boys underpinning the house.' The bill was 12 shillings. Two rather unusual services were performed for Obadiah Holmes, Sr. in 1768. He was billed for putting wings to the windmill & for making an instrument for John Holmes to press leather. In 1765 & 1766, Lawrence listed charges of £30 for work done on the Meeting House by me & my boys. In 1771 there were more bills for work on the Meeting House, these charged to Edmond Williams, who was an active member of the Shrewsbury Friend's Meeting.

    Lawrence seems to have had a well equipped shop for there are charges for turning bannisters & for making all sorts of parts for cider mills. In 1761 he was working on Van Dorn's mill & in 1766 built a mill for Cyrenius Van Mater, the latter probably a grist mill. In 1762 he made a number of moulds for brick-making for John Tilton. In 1768 there were charges for repairing looms. In 1782 he built some behives for Joseph Van Mater. In 1791 he made 2 hat blocks for Rulief Van Mater, presumably a hatter, & in 1793 he made a stove for him.

    . After William Lawrence's death in 1795, his son Jacob continued the business at least until 1817. But in this period most entries in the account book he took over from his father are for making coffins & repairing wagons & sleighs. Stillwell's Historical & Genealogical Miscellany says that Lawrence's eldest son, Daniel, was killed in the Revolution (he was a member of the Monmouth Militia), & 3 other sons, John, Richard & William, supported the Tory cause & moved to Canada. Perhaps the son William Lawrence was the Shrewsbury Tory of that name whose lands were seized by the American government in 1781. Lawrence's will left £30 each to his sons John & Richard & the bulk of his estate to his son Jacob. But there was no mention of his son William.
    Ref: Asbury Park Press, NJ. - - -

    Birth:
    (Perth Amboy, NJ).

    Died:
    WILL Proved 21 Oct 1795.

    William married Margaret TILTON on 5 Mar 1748 in Shrewsbury's Friends' House. Margaret (daughter of Daniel TILTON, Jr. and Elizabeth POWELL) was born on 13 Dec 1719 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey; died on 5 Feb 1767 in Monmouth County, New Jersey; was buried in Shrewsburys Friend's Burying Ground. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 13.  Margaret TILTON was born on 13 Dec 1719 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey (daughter of Daniel TILTON, Jr. and Elizabeth POWELL); died on 5 Feb 1767 in Monmouth County, New Jersey; was buried in Shrewsburys Friend's Burying Ground.

    Notes:

    . 1748 Feb 28 - Three days before his marriage to Margaret Tilton, he made application to the Men's Monthly Friends Meeting, Shrewsbury, NJ, for a certificate of removal to Philadelphia, Penn.

    "History of Tilton Family In America," page 182, makes the statement: "Margaret Tilton married William Lawrence, son of Richard Lawrence, May 5, 1748."

    . 1748 March 5 - Quarker Marriage Record:
    1748, 5day, 3 mo., William Lawrence, married to Margaret Tilton, both of Middletown, at an appointed meeting, attended at of Daniel Tilton's house.
    Witnesses: Cattron Lawrence, William Lawrence, Amos Tilton, Margaret Lawrence, William Lawrence Jr., Daniel Tilton, George Williams, John Tilton, Mary Tilton, Anne Tilton, Joseph Field, Sarah Tilton, John Tilton.2, Abigail Tilton, Increase Tilton, Margaret Tilton [her own signature?]

    . Historical & Genealogical Miscellany, Vol. V, pg. 142, further states:
    "Margaret Tilton married, at the house of Daniel Tilton, May 5, 1748,
    William, son of Richard, age 20 & Alice Lawrence; both of Middletown, born Dec. 1st.

    . Margaret Tilton is mentioned in her father Daniel's WILL of 1749. FIRST SERIES VOL XXXIII.

    . Mary Tilton; second intentions, Burlington Meeting, Oct. 1, 1744, married, Oct. 10, 1744, Job Ridgway, Jr., of Little Egg Harbor, son of Thomas.
    Witnesses: Daniel, Margaret, Sarah & Phebe Tilton, [i.e. her sisters:].

    . Tilton, Francis Theodore, THE HISTORY OF THE TILTON FAMILY IN AMERICA. New Jersey, 1939-40. page 181
    History: Jones, William H, William Tilton: His English Origins & Some American Descendants, Heritage Books Inc, Maryland, (1997) pg. 79.

    BURIAL:
    . Margaret, the wife of William David, the son of David & Sarah & Esek Tilton, son of William & Margaret Tilton, are each buried in the Friends' Burying ground, at Shrewsbury, but with no other inscription than the initials: M.T., D.T & E.T.
    Ref: Historical & Genealogical Miscellany, Vol. 5.

    . Typical houses in Colts Neck:
    Most of the houses of the Provincial period were shingled on the outside by cedar shingles & roofed with the same material. They were, generally, filled in with mud, sometimes worked up with chopped straw. The front doors were often ornamented with heavy & elaborate knockers of iron or brass. The doors themselves were large & in the Dutch buildings, usually divided horizontally into 2 at the middle. Windows were usually small. Floors were of very broad planks (sometimes two feet wide) & laid directly on heavy hand-hewn oak beams.

    Chimneys became larger, some being 12 feet wide, needing logs so large & heavy that they had to be drawn within the kitchen by a horse. Ovens were no longer detached, but built in one of the side-walls of the kitchen chimney (such as that in the Frederick's home on Laird Road.) Vegetables were sometimes stored in outside root-cellars. Ice was preserved in deep pits, lined with logs & covered by a peaked roof. - - -

    Birth:

    Notes:

    Married:
    REF. History of Tilton Family In America, Pg 182, Box J4 Folder 17
    41056; Alt DOM: 5 May, 1748 .

    Children:
    1. Daniel LAWRENCE, .II was born on 20 Aug 1750 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey; died before 1783 in New Jersey.
    2. Ensign William LAWRENCE, .9th was born on 24 Mar 1752 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey; died on 23 Jun 1780 in Springfield, Union Co., New Jersey.
    3. Lieut. John LAWRENCE, , UE, & JP was born on 10 Apr 1754 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey; died on 30 Dec 1821 in Richmond Hill, Vaughan Twp., York Co., Ontario; was buried on 1 Jan 1822 in Richmond Hill Presbyterian Cemetery.
    4. Alice LAWRENCE, UE was born on 12 Dec 1756 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey; died on 26 Nov 1827 in New Brunswick, Canada.
    5. Helen LAWRENCE, .i was born on 10 Oct 1757 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey; died before 1795 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey.
    6. 6. Lieut. Richard LAWRENCE, , UE was born on 20 Aug 1759 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey; died before 5 May 1831 in Harwich, Kent Co., Ontario.
    7. Elizabeth LAWRENCE, .x was born on 1 Oct 1761 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey; died on 26 Nov 1827 in Wakefield, Carleton Co., New Brunswick.
    8. Elisha LAWRENCE, .5 was born on 10 Apr 1764 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey; died after Mar 1795.
    9. Jacob LAWRENCE, Sr. was born on 8 Mar 1767 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey; died on 29 Jul 1823 in Middletown, Monmouth Co., New Jersey.

  5. 14.  John WILLSON, .1, Sur. was born on 24 Jun 1739 in Piscataway Twp., Middlesex Co., New Jersey; died on 8 Jul 1829 in Sharon, East Gwillimbury, York Co., Ontario; was buried in Sharon Burial Grounds.

    Notes:

    A great deal of documents exist for John Willson, Esq., of which a selection are recorded here:

    PART ONE:

    John is the son of Sara Ladner & John Willson, Senior.

    . 1760 Oct. 16 - WILL of John Landstaff of Piscataway, New Jersey:
    To wife Mary & grandson John Langstaff, lands south of Ambrose Book.
    Witnesses John Willson, Jr. & John Arnold. Langstaff & Arnold also went to Upper Canada, where they were amongst many New Jersey exiles located near each other on north Yonge Street, Toronto. - PJA

    . Old United Empire Loyalists List
    John Wilson of Piscataway, Middlesex Co., Memorial, Summary now of Miramachi Northumberland Co. 1786, joined troops at Woodbridge in 1777 in Forge Dept. Claim for 50 Acres & an house.
    Ref: Commission for Loyalist Losses. # 12 /16 /187 -192, 63/115 &109/320. Jan. 1787.

    . Settled 1784 May, New Brunswick, Canada: John Wilson, Esq,. 8 in Family, 2 acres improved & house.

    . 1789 -11 Jul 1793 John Willson & Family landed in New Brunswick, Canada in 1783 & was granted land on the Miramachi River, in Northumberland County. Gov. Thomas Carlton made John a & Justice of the Peace. The salary for a magistrate in New Brunswick was £300 a year. His adventures there in this wild land would be enough for one lifetime, to speak nothing of what preceded the Miramichi or what would come after.
    A more complete history may be found at North York Public Library, Toronto under Richard Lawrence, John Brown Lawrence & John Willson of New Jersey, NB & Ontario. P J Ahlberg, May 2009.

    . 1791 Nov., Upper Canada Proclamation, creating new province; & by
    . 1792 Aug 16 - In Quebec City John Willson visited Gov. J G Simcoe. (before Simcoe left for Niagara), who invited him to Upper Canada.

    . 1793 Apr 26, John Willson, JP, paid for a tombstone at Willson's Point, Miramichi, NB made for his grandson, Abraham Willson.

    WHY HE LEFT NEW BRUNSWICK:
    Mr. Wilson further says, that when he left the Miramichi Settlements in the NB, he did it because the lands are not valuable for farmers & not worth clearing from the severity of the climate, that one of his sons-in-laws had already left the Settlement. Mr. Wilson says that a due care to provide for his family was the sole reason of this quitting Miramichi. He is his own person being better off there then he would possibly be elsewhere living almost without labour upon offices he possessed in that Country. A true statement, Signed, E B Littlehales, 16 July, 1794, Niagara.

    1796 UPPER CANADA LAND PETITION & Revolutionary Muster:
    To John Graves Simcoe, Lieut. John Willson, Jur. He suffered much by this Rebel party (at the point of the bayonet) before the British Army Landed on Staten island, the making several attempts to join them but always hindered till when the British Army was Advancing from the White Plains (NY) to the Jersey. I then joined them at Woodbridge [New Jersey ] & went with them to Brunswick (NJ).
    I then entered into James Christies' employ [i.e. the Quartermaster] as a Foragemaster & ran Many risks of my Life, being twice taken Prisoner & confined but maid my escape & returned to my service again, till when the army returned from the Jerseys to Staten Island & embarked for the Head of Elk [River flowing towards Philadelphia] were my health would not admit of my going on board to retrieved with my family on said Island where I continued till the commencement of the peace.
    I then with my family embarked with my family for Nova Scotia (since New Brunswick), where I drew 270 acres in Northumberland where I served in Sivil Commission & offices under Governor Carleton till July the 19th, 1793. There I set out with 60 men, women & children (Including my own family) for Niagara where we arrived on the 7th of next October.
    ... He wants Lots 4 & 5 on the River Humber & Lot 30 on west side of Yonge Street. March 25th, 1796, John Willson.

    . Schedule of grants to pay full fees to the Home District - William Jarvis Copy Books:
    Grant # 166 Wilson, John, Jun, 190 Acres, York, 12 Mar. 1794, U.E., Fee £3.5.2

    . Willson I, John Sur., UE, UCLP W Bundle 2, 1796. Vol. 522, Petition #57, Yonge Street, Microfiche C2950.
    On March 16, 1810 John purchased a Town of York, Lot 3 & 4 N side, Hospital Street for £100 & sold it at an apparent lost of £50, the next year to Jesse Ketchum. - . -

    PART TWO, NB to Toronto:

    X-Reference: Richard Lawrence & John Willson Petition for RATIONS AT NIAGARA my W25- W31 IV
    The Simcoe Papers Toronto Public Reference Library & John McGill papers,
    [TPL also, at the Baldwin Room: comprises 3 boxes of 'True' hand written duplicates of correspondences & accounts for Upper Canada. Documents are In precarious state. Photocopies of the original documents may be seen in my book on R Lawrence & J Willson.]

    , MAY FLEET's ARRIVAL AT YORK, Summary
    John Willson & 46 people assembled & left New Brunswick together in 1793 to come to Ontario. Many of these people had known each other back in the United States, during & previously to the Revolutionary War. The May Fleet journey began in 1783 at Staten Island, New York with British evacuation to New Brunswick & Nova Scotia were the new life was crowed & difficult. New land was being offered in Upper Canada. Here is part of that journey from the Kingston to the Town of York, today's Toronto, on north shore of Lake Ontario.

    On 11 July, 1793 the group took a ship around NB & then up the St. Lawrence River to Montreal. On the 17th of August, at Montreal, Commandant Isaac W Clarke assigned, the group an six extra Canadians to guide the three bateaux past the Rapids of Lachine. The open bateau were thirty feet long & propelled with both a moveable sail, ropes & barge poles.

    When they arrived at the Port of Kingston they were sick & needed treatment from the kind doctors at Fort William Henry. They promised to repay the Fort for the 1543 rations they had been assigned,. Even though the Commandant risked having to pay for the rations from his own military salary, Capt. Porter wrote, "humanity induced me to act as I have done."

    The Assembly had arrived at Kingston 28th day of August. For a month they waited for the next bateaux "but did not gain Niagara until 7th October, 1793." The late Chief Justice, the Honorable William Osgood, said he would speak to Simcoe for the further 1529 Rations the starving & sick families again required upon their arrival at Fort George at Niagara-on-the-Lake, Upper Canada. (Also referred in the documents as Newark or Head of the Lake (Ontario). By return poste, Governor Simcoe ordered the Fort commandant to convey the Loyalist by the Government boat, to north bank of Lake Ontario to the Town of York.

    THE SIXTY PEOPLE of this new 'MAY FLEET arrival at York' included an additional fourteen members of whom it is likely the Kendricks joined up at Kingston. The names of those twelve families who made the journey were:
    John Willson, Richard Lawrence, Patrick Cobgon, Joseph Kendrick, Peter Whitney (signed), John Kendrick, Titus Fitz, Duke William Kendrick, Samuel Sinclair, Samuel Osborn, Hiram Kendrick, Peter Long.

    John Willson had signed, for the provisions for the group & it was he that was required to sign a receipt on 2 Nov., 1793 for £100 repayment in three years. Some of the assembly had already moved on from the area & thus leaving no chance of their earning money for to repay Willson.

    THE KINGS MILL ON THE HUMBER ( The Old Mill, Etobicoke, Ontario):
    , Gov. Simcoe gave a License to John Willson & to John Brown Lawrence to build & operate the Kings Mill on the Humber River. Both Willson & Lawrence were lawyers who had done legal business together on occasion back in Burlington, NJ. As well both were friends of Gov. Simcoe.

    * 1797-99 ' KINGS MILL First Hand DESCRIPTION *
    The Kingsmill was located between the two roads on the west side of the Humber at the spring above at the meadow. * The Mill seat was a log structure thirty feet by sixty feet long built on a small island in the Humber. A dam & mill race were built to allow salmon & other fish free passage up & down without being destroyed in the race or by the mill wheel. No one must allowed to catch these fish. It was also here that one one of Gov. Simcoe's personal horses was stolen while in pasture on John Lawrence's land & recovered sometime after his death.
    A beautiful cedar swamp provided fencing for the house at the spring on the high banks. The Kingsmill was on the lower end of the famous Toronto Carrying Place Trail. On the high sandy bank opposite Kingsmill there stood for over thousand years a large village of Seneca longhouses.

    The best British regulations to preserve the large runs of salmon & trout, also encouraged the cutting of trees along the river habitant. Old photos show graphically the hazards of spring break-up as ice boulders overflow onto the location of the mill race & pond & on the island adjacent the Kingsmill.

    LUMBER from the HUMBER: One fourth of all lumber cut was due as rent payment to the Government. Thick pine slabs from the Kings sawmill were used in the Navy Hall at Niagara-on-Lake, Gov. Simcoe's home called Castle Frank; the First Parliament buildings, Kings St., Toronto & cedar was used to build the Howland's the Lambton Mill, a mile up stream at Dundas Street.
    . Willson was paid from the public purse to deliver by oxen, the thick pine planks to Castle Frank on Bloor Street. John Willson had cut lumber in May 1798 to build on his front lot in the Town of York.

    . On 9th Nov., 1797 Lt. John McGill registered in his papers, an application from John Willson to purchase the Kings Mill which Willson found in need of improvements when he first took up the lease. A total of £299 income had been generated from 1794 - 1796 the saw mill operations. Willson might have had an opportunity to purchase the Kingsmill, if Lieut. Gov. Simcoe remained in Upper Canada when the Mill lease opened up again in 1799.

    , . On 16 July 1796 from the government stores Gov. Simcoe ordered to be issued to John Lawrence, Esq., a pair of French Bur Mill Stones & grist mill irons as needed for the befit of the settlers in that district. The first seven barrel of corn ears to be shelled & measured with government's four barrel arrived at the grist mill on 20th October, 1796.
    Lease from the Kingsmill ran from 1 Jan 1796 to end of 1798.
    [ - Is this the same French bur mill stone sitting outside of current 'Old Mill Inn' on the Humber River?

    Lease from the Kingsmill ran from 1 Jan 1796 to end of 1798. Unfortunately his partner John Lawrence died about the 10 July, 1798 & Willson friend & sponsor, Gov. Simcoe had returned to England due to ill health. Photos of ice jams at spring break up show clearly that the British engineers who chose this location in Upper Canada had no idea of the force of the Humber River in spring or the storm run off, especially with the increased deforestation would decimate the salmon fishery... Since Hurricane Hazel in 1957 the Humber Valley is considered a flood plain & is preserved as park land only. Contractors hired by the British to build the mill did not finish the job. The millstones cut too slowly & the mill race & pond & other repairs had to be done at the expense of John Willson. Willson was granted Lots 4 & 5 on the Humber River, but the Government mill on this property had to be leased out at the cost of half of the wood cut. The normal fee was usually one quarter of the wood cut. - P J Ahlberg 2009.

    . 1799 Mar 23rd, John Willson advertised in the Oracle, York to sell Lots 4 & 5, the 50 acres & a most beautiful cedar swamp. Persons willing to purchase may know the conditions by applying to John Wilson, Esquire, on Yonge Street. When the lease expired it was purchased by Peter Whitney.

    . 1800 Apr 8, Tues. First Sitting of Home District Magistrates (York Co.): Wm. Jarvis, John Willson.
    Ref: Toronto Sundries, Quarter Session Minutes. - . -

    PART THREE, Life in Upper Canada:

    . 1798 May 4, John Willson, Esq. Identification marks of Cattle, hoggs, sheep & swine: a swallow-fork in each ear.

    UC LAND GRANTS: 1200 ACRES - Lots 4 & 5, on the Humber (adjoining the Kings Mill (Old Mill) June 1797;
    Lots 5, 6, 7, 8, Con 3, Dorchester Twp., Elgin County, 800 Acres ( in the 'future Capital of Upper Canada', also near the land of Lt. Gen. John Graves Simcoe.)
    . Lot 30, Con 1 West Yonge Street, Vaughan, Settlement Duty paid 1801, finally granted Feb. 1809;
    . Town of York Lots 3 & 4 N side of Hospital St., Purchased £100, Ontario St. to Sherbourne St. [In 1827 Bank of Upper Canada Building, 252 Adelaide St. E. 1830 Toronto's First Post Office, 260 Adelaide St. E.]

    . From 1798 to about 1820 John lived at Lot 30, Con 1 Yonge Street. He ran a saw mill on his property & he was also a Justice of Peace. John's wife, Rebecca Thixton, died in June 1804 & was buried on her son property, at Lot 26, Yonge Street & Steeles.
    (X-Ref: Wm. L. Willson for description of first burial site.)

    UPPER CANADA SUNDRIES:
    Willson J., 1814 February 8, York, page 7839 & Willson, John, 1814 March 12, York, Pg. 8019-21.
    Ref: Archives of Canada, microfiche C 9822-25.

    * 1798 Dec 19th, York Officers of the York Militia: John Willson, Esq., Justice of the Peace, formerly Capt. of Militia, in Nova Scotia, to be a Captain in the York Militia.

    . UCLP15, Y Batch 5, p417. -1801 Jul 16 - East Side Yonge St, Lot 30, No clearing, Longs in the Street not burnt.

    . June 28th, 1802, a wolf's scalp certified by J. Wilson, Esq., taken in part of assessment £1. "Page n515.

    * 1800 Apr 8, Tuesday. The First Sitting in Upper Canada of the Home District Magistrates:
    Wm. Jarvis, JOHN WILLSON, John Small, James Macauly, Wm. Willcocks, Wm. Allan, John McGill, Alex Wood, Wm. Chewett, James Ruggles, Signed, Justices of our said Lord the King, assigned to keep the Peace of our said Lord, the King in the Home District & also to hear & determine divers felonies, trespasses & other incidences in the said District. Wm. Jarvis, Esq., chose chairman. Commission opened & read.
    Ref: Home District Quarter Session of the Peace Minutes. [i.e. Toronto, York County, Ontario.]
    Note2: William Willocks, 1735 Co. Cork, Ireland-1813 Jan 7 Toronto, was the first cousin of Peter Russell. Willocks was the only magistrate not a barrister.

    . 1805 Sept 18. John married Catherine B Kuhn who was the widow of a man also named John Willson, who had died 1788 in Duchess Co., New Jersey. They moved northward to Hope (Sharon, Ontario) which is very near Lake Simcoe. Catherine's s on David Willson had split off from the local Quaker group, to start his own group called the Children of Peace, who were having a renaissance of intellectual thought & music. John taught school at the Children of Peace & John & his 2nd wife Katherine were buried in the Sharon Burial Grounds. John remained Anglican & Bishop Strachan said officiated at his funeral. When eventual son Wm. Ladner Willson's land was sold, Rebecca & John were reburied together under cairn at the Holy Trinity Church in Thornhill, not far from their home on Yonge Street. The Sharon Temple / Children of Peace celebrated their 200 anniversary in 2008 with candlelight concerts & is open as a museum.

    * * Recapitulation of Fort York, (Toronto), WAR of 1812,
    As a captain of the 1st Regiment, York Militia on duty at the captured at Fort York, John Willson was arrested & jailed. John Willson was one of the 6 officers that signed the papers of Recapitulation to the American invaders. Geo. Playter's Diary tells us, like him, John Willson was armed with a musket & ready for action!

    * 1813 Apr 25 - York. Capt. John Willson, 1st York Militia, Prisoner of War at surrender of the Garrison of Ft. York 24 Apr 1813, captured by the Army & Navy of the US at York.

    * 1820 Jun 28 - UCLPetition 219, 1820 Re: War of 1812. Petition of John Willson, Markham, Ontario. American loyalist & was again on service as a Captain commanding a company of the 1st Regiment of York Militia, part of the time in York Garrison in 1812 & was on duty till the capture of York. (June 1813.) John Willson, York 28 Jun 1820.
    Also attached was a certificate signed, Colonel W Allan, Commanding Militia & Garrison of York, 15 Jun, 1820.

    Obituary notice: "Died At Hope Village, East Guillimbury, on the 8th inst., much & generally regretted, John Wilson, Esq., a native of the Province of New Jersey, aged 90 years & 14 days. Mr. Willson was a U.E. Loyalist & for a long period an active magistrate in the province of New Brunswick. He emigrated into Upper Canada 35 years ago [1793] & contented to enjoy good health until with a few days of his demise. At his request, expressed on his death bed, Doctor Strachan, Archdean on of York, went out to Gwillimbury & performed the last offices of the church over the remains. The venerable dignitary delivery a funeral oration in the chapel of the Children of Peace, in Hope, on the occasion, which was attended by a great concourse of friends, acquainted & relate vies the deceased.".
    Ref: Colonial Advocate, Published 16 Jul 1829.
    Note1: Hope, E. Gwillimbury is also now know as Sharon, Ontario.

    * DEATH OF JOHN WILLSON: In your letter of the 24th ult., 1829, you asked about one John Willson who died at Hope (Sharon, ON) about. This old man was called Squire Willson. He was David Willson's stepfather, my father's stepmother's second husband (Katherine Kuhn). Her first husband, also called John Willson, died about 1788 in Duchess County, New York). She soon after married Squire Willson who was a man highly respected. He came, I believe for NS in Gov. Simcoe's time & was by the Governor much thought of. He had a large family by a former wife, but none by this one. There are a number of great grandchildren, living in the Twps. of York & Scarborough. Service of the Canada Company at the time of the settling of Goderich & neighborhood. When these old people became helpless, David Willson took them home & kept them until they died. They died poor but honest. They once had property which his children spent for them.
    Ref: Extracted from a letter of 5 December, 1869, Holland Landing Richard Titus Willson.

    A still more complete family history & pictures may be found at North York Public Library, Toronto & at the Richmond Hill Library, under Richard Lawrence, U.E., John Willson & John Brown Lawrence of New Jersey, NB & Ontario. P J Ahlberg, U.E, May 2009. - - -

    Birth:


    Died:


    Buried:
    Sharon, ON.

    John married Rebeka Thixton THICKSON(E) in 1760 in Piscataway Twp., Middlesex Co., New Jersey. Rebeka was born on 10 Jul 1743 in Woodbridge Twp., Middlesex Co., New Jersey; died on 6 Jun 1804 in Thornhill, Vaughan Twp., York Co., Ontario; was buried on 7 Jun 1804 in Thornhill, Vaughan Twp., York Co., Ontario. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 15.  Rebeka Thixton THICKSON(E) was born on 10 Jul 1743 in Woodbridge Twp., Middlesex Co., New Jersey; died on 6 Jun 1804 in Thornhill, Vaughan Twp., York Co., Ontario; was buried on 7 Jun 1804 in Thornhill, Vaughan Twp., York Co., Ontario.

    Notes:

    Obituary: On Wednesday the 6th instant, at two in the morning, departed this life, much lamented, Rebecca Wilson, wife of John Wilson, Esq., of Yonge street, in the 63 year of her age. The following day her remains were followed by the a numerous train of mourners & friends to the place of interment, where a suitable oration was delivered by the Rev. Mr. Stuart on the solemn occasion.
    Ref: THE ORACLE, Saturday, June 16, 1804, No. 8, Total # 684 (subscribers).

    Rebecca & John Willson were living with their son Wm. Ladner, at the time of Rebecca's death.

    BURIAL CAIRN
    Willson, East face: John Willson Esq., aged 90 years & 11 days died July 8th 1829. Moved 1940 from East Gwillimbury In mind Rebecca Willson wife of John Willson Esq. departed June 6th 1804, aged 61 years. Moved in 1940 from Lot 26 Markham which was a Loyalist grant to her son W.L. Willson. [Wm. Ladner Willson.]

    West face: John Willson, U.E.L. born in Middlesex Cy, New Jersey, 1739. died in York Cy, Upper Canada, 1829. Also his wife. Rebecca Thixton, born in New Jersey, 1743 died in Markham Tp., Yonge St 1804.

    John Willson brought his family to St. John, N.B. in the "May Fleet" in 1783 & came to Upper Canada in 1793. He held the lease of the "Kings Mill on St John's Creek" on the site of the present ruin known as the Old Mill on the Humber, from 1793 till 1799, when he came to Yonge St. with his son & a nephew, John Arnold. He was among the officers of the 1st York Regiment held prisoners at Fort York in April, 1813.

    RE-BURIALS: John had been buried in 1829 in Queensville Burial Grounds, with his second wife Katherine Kuhn. Rebecca had been buried in 1804 on her son's William's farm on 1 Jan.,1940, descendant Alice Willson of Toronto had them reburied together & had build also the stone cairn near south side fence, in Holy Trinity Cemetery. This incidentally would be adjacent to the property of her daughter, Mrs. Mary Willson Lawrence, which is the last lot in the Toronto.(This stone cairn is in Holy Trinity Cemetery, Richmond Hill on Yonge St. near Royal Orchard Blvd., behind Baptist church Holy Trinity Church which since has been moved when Yonge Street was widened from two lanes.)
    Ref: North York Ref: Library, Newspaper Collection, R E. Wm. C H Dowson & Alice Willson. - PJ Ahlberg, 2010.

    . 1940 Oct 10, North York: Erects Memorial Cairn of Boulders
    M W C H Dick Doson of 68? Parkview Ave, Willow has must completed the erection of a memorial cairn of field boulders in Thornhill Anglican Cemetery. This is to the memory of Capt. John Willson, Esq. & his wife Rebecca Thixton. ... His wife predeceased him in 1804. She was buried in what is now the lawn of Mr. Hugh Wilson (no relation) on the north side of Steeles Ave. near Bayview.
    Her gravestone the oldest in the area is believed to have been carved & erected by her husband himself. It is a piece of unhewn river slate such as is found in the Humber river area. The lettering, crudely carved reads, "In Mind, Rebecca Willson, wife of John Willson, Esq. who died June the 6, 1804. " The 2 old head stones are set together in the east side of the cairn facing the rising sun, wind & storms. The cairn boulders are not hammer dressed but remain as they came from the field.
    The cairn contains, history of Thornhill Anglican Church; other records, coins & stamps inc. a letter, sealed in a glass container.
    The work was done for Miss Alice Willson of Toronto, who is a retired teacher of languages; & a direct descendent of those to whom the memorial is erected. She is also a descendent of Mr. Jacob Cummer founder of Willowdale.
    Ref: North York Enterprise Newspaper.

    Note: New Jersey WILL mentions Arnold relations & Yonge St. neighbours Langstaff:
    1797 Sept 15 Arnold, John, of Piscataway,Middlesex Co. Administrators James Arnold, David Thorp. Fellow bondsmen Henry Fourat & Joseph Thicksun all of said County.
    Inventory £266 made by John Langstaff, senior & Junior.

    For Research:
    1. Rebecca Thicksun, born 18 May 1798, Bonhamtown, Middlesex, NJ d/o Lewis Wm. Thickstun & Mary Molly Compton, Is this a brother or some relation? & she married Chamberlain.
    2. Rebecca Thickstun b 1751 Piscataway, Middlesex NJ, d 23 Sep 1819 Woodbridge, Middlexsex, NJ. Relationship?

    3. NJ Calendar of Wills: 1711-12 Feb. 12. Blackford, Samuel, of Pitscatways, Witnesses: William Thick Stone, Wm. Lang, Ad. Hude. Proved April 29, 1712.

    4. WILL of Azariah Dunham of NB, Middlesex Co., NJ,D 1789 12 23, to Daughter Jane, wife of Joseph Thixton of Piscataway, 30 Acres.

    . St. James Episcopal Church, 2136 Woodbridge Ave. Edison, Piscataway , NJ. ' Founded 1666. Organized in 1704, this is the second church on the site. It was erected in 1837 in the new Greek Revival style, Although the cemetery does not appear well tended, the church has been kept us exceptionally well.' Edison as formerly called Raritan Township. Revolutionary War skirmishes took place in Bonhamtown, Piscataway on Woodbridge Avenue. St. James Episcopal Church building served as a barracks hospital for wounded British soldiers during the war. Piscatawaytown Burial Ground is also referred to as the White Church Cemetery. - -- -

    Birth:
    Alt Name: Thickson. Rebeka Ref: Her signature.

    Died:
    Lot 26, Con 1 Yonge East Side.

    Buried:
    - on property of son Wm. L Willson.

    Notes:

    Married:
    St. James Church

    Children:
    1. 7. Mary WILLSON, DUE was born est 1770 in Piscataway Twp., Middlesex Co., New Jersey; died est 21 Feb 1821 ± in Charlotteville, Norfolk Co., Ontario.