Alice Grace ALLIE HAMILTON, .2

Female 1879 - 1941  (61 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Alice Grace ALLIE HAMILTON, .2 was born on 15 Jun 1879 in St. Johns, Clinton Co., Michigan (daughter of Rev. James W HAMILTON, Jr., .3 and Alice Josephine HALL); died in 1941 in Anona Twp., Pinellas Co., Florida; was buried in Anona Pioneer Cemetery.

    Notes:

    . Census 1880 Alice G Hamilton, daughter 11 months, May 1879 b Michigan, Father b Canada, Mother b. Penn.

    Daily Palladium Newspaper, Benton Harbor, Michigan:
    .1899 Aug 2- St. Jospeh, Miss Alice Hamilton entertained a large apr of friends at her home last evening Games were played & tempting refreshment served.
    . 1903 Apr 3 - Ransom-Hamilton Marriage: Mr. Kenneth M Ransom of this city & Miss Alice Grace Hamilton, dau. of Rev. James Hamilton, were married at Grand Rapids at 8:15 o'clock his morning those attending from here were Mr & Mrs. H A Hamilton, Carl Schwendener & Miss Elva Wheeler.
    Mr. & Mrs. Ransom will arrive here tonight & will make their home on Winchester Ave. The bride is well known in this city where she resided during the pastorate of her father.

    1910 Mar 18 - Mrs. Alice Ransom has returned to her home in Chicago, after a visit here with fiends & relatives.
    Ref: St. Joseph Daily Press, Michigan.

    Grand Rapids Press
    . 1903 Apr 3 - Marriage License: Kenneth M Ransom, St. Joseph; Alice G Hamilton Grand Rapids, 27-23.
    . 1903 Apr 11 - Ransom-Hamilton, Mr. Kenneth M Ransom & Miss Alice G Hamilton were united in marriage at the home of the bride's parents, 521 Sherman St., at 8 o'clock, Thus. evening, her father Rev James Hamilton officiating...double ring exchange, profusion of flower and man friend. The parlor decorations were smaller & Easter lilies, semi-cycle of palms & above the heads of the bide & groom hung suspended a lover's knot of white satin. The sitting room done in myrtle with red carnations.
    Mrs. J Hamilton, Jr. sang "O Promise Me" & Mrs. Fred Hamilton followed with the bridal chorus from Lohengrin.
    the bride wore white Persian lawn trimmed with lace & carried Easter lilies. Miss Redner, sister of the bride was mistress of ceremonies & was dressed in black net over blue silk.
    Among the out of town guests were: Mrs. John McCutcheon of Big Rapids & Mr & Mrs. P Hamilton, Mr. & Mrs. J F Redner & son; Miss Edith Young of Battle Creek; Mr & Mrs. Fred Hamilton, Karl Schwender & Miss Elva Wheeler of St. Joseph. Mr. & Mrs. Ransom will make their home in St. Joseph.
    . 1930 Apr 18 - Anona, Pinellas Co., Florida
    Kenneth M Ransom, age 53 / 1877, Kansas, Farmer on poultry farm,
    Alice G, wife age 50/ 1880, Michigan
    Wyllys M, son age 21 /1909, Illinois
    Mary E Ransom, age 11 / 1919 in Florida.
    . 1903 Oct 2, Rev JH of Grand Raids has arrived to visit his children, Fred Hamilton & Mrs. Kenneth Ransom.

    . 1914 Nov 10 - Surprise Birthday Party: Friends & relatives of Earl A DuBois gave him a surprise party at this home on Nebraska heights last night. Present were 4 generations, Mrs Anna R Dubois, 80 years old, the great grandmother;
    Charles L Dubois, the grandfather, the father O A Dubois & his son , Charles, 2 years old.
    Other guests were Mr & Mrs Geo. L Carlisle, Mrs Foster, Mr & Mrs. Kenneth Ransom, Mr & Mrs Owen Colle, Mr & Mrs JW McKinley, H Guy Sweeney, Mrs E B Gaylord.
    Dancing, games & other entertainment features were indulged in until a late hour.
    . 1932 Sep 20, Tues. Indian Rocks, JP Hamilton mama, is a guest of his sister, Mrs. Kenneth Ransom.
    Ref: Tampa Tribune, Fla.
    . 1916 Jul 5, Waranty Deeds, Alice J Hamilton to Alice Grane Ransom, Lot 23, 9 Harbor View, $1.
    Ref: Tampa Bay Stimes, St. Petersburg, Florida. - -

    Died:
    Clearwater, Pinella, Fl.

    Buried:
    Lorgo, FL.

    Alice married Kenneth Malcolm RANSOM on 2 Apr 1903 in Grand Rapids, Kent Co., Michigan. Kenneth was born on 4 Feb 1876 in Lawrence, Douglas Co., Kansas; died in Nov 1957 in Anona Twp., Pinellas Co., Florida; was buried in Anona Pioneer Cemetery. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Married:
    by James W Hamilton, Meth., Minister of the Gospel. (i.e. her father).

    Children:
    1. Gretchen Virginia RANSOM was born on 19 Dec 1905 in Chicago, Cook Co., Illinois; died on 6 Jun 1994 in Largo, Pinellas Co., Florida; was buried in Serenity Gardens Memorial Park.
    2. Wyllys McDonald RANSOM was born on 28 Jul 1908 in Chicago, Cook Co., Illinois; died on 11 Jul 1973 in Anona Twp., Pinellas Co., Florida; was buried in Anona Pioneer Cemetery.
    3. Corporal Mary E RANSOM was born on 28 Dec 1918 in Anona Twp., Pinellas Co., Florida; died on 1 Sep 1996 in Florida; was buried in Anona Pioneer Cemetery.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Rev. James W HAMILTON, Jr., .3 was born on 17 Feb 1842 in Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario (son of James HAMILTON, Sr. and Rebecca LAWRENCE, DUE); died on 22 Oct 1915 in Sulphur Springs, Hillsborough, Florida; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery.

    Notes:

    * Ontario Wesleyan Methodist BAPTISMAL REGISTER, Ontario Register 2, Page 316, Halton Co., Trafalgar Twp., Wentworth:
    James Hamilton, son of James & Rebecca. Resided E. Flamboro. Born E. Flamboro. See E. Flamboro [No date given.] & 2nd entry:

    * Gore - Trafalgar Twp., Flamboro E. Twp., James Hamilton son of James & Rebecca.
    Resided E. Flamboro, born E. Flamboro on 17 Feb.1842;
    Baptized 16 Jan. 1859 at E. Flamboro by Rev. A T Green. Registration # 1371.
    Ref: Methodist Church Register Vol. 2, pg. 94.

    . 1850 Directory of Inhabitants of York County, Chingucousy Twp., Lot 5, Con 4, James Hamilton, with [brother] John Hamilton.
    Note1: It seems likely represented here is James Hamilton Junior. - PJA

    James W. Hamilton - Could the W. stand for Willson, his grandparents? -PJA

    . 1855 Chinguacousy Twp., Ontario Tax Collectors Rolls
    Hamilton James (Jr.) Con 4 E Lot 4, 5, 2 &, No 267
    Hamilton John, Con 4 E Lot 5, No 139
    Hamilton Richard, Con 4 E Lot 4, 5, 2 & 1, No 267.

    * 1861 March Census, Flamborough W, Twp., Wentworth Co., Ontario, Canada:
    Rebecca Hamilton, b 1815, Alexander b 1838; Richard, b 1835; Mary Jane b 1839; Hadassah, b 1842; James, b 1844 Nursery Agent, [unnamed ] 'Family member not present'; & Rebecca, b 1846 Upper Canada.

    * 1861 Agricultural Census Chingoucousy Twp., Peel Co., Ontario :
    James Hamilton, Con 4, Lot 1, 150 Acres, 100 cultivated, 78A. in 1860, Orchard/Garden 20A., Woods 3 A., Farm value $1000.
    Fall Wheat 76A /1 bushel., Spring Wheat 20A/6000 bu., Barley, Rye nil, Peas, Oats, Potatoes, Turnips, Hops 20 Acres. [This census is somewhat blurry.]

    . 1866 Toronto Peel Directory: Richard Hamilton, Con 4 Lot 4, freeholder, Chinguacousy Twp. &
    James Hamilton Con 4, Lot 1, Chingoucousy Twp; John Hamilton Con 4 Lot 5 also
    John Hamilton Con 6, Lot 25 house. Chinguacousy Twp.
    [i.e.. near Acton, Ontario. Reminder, the Directory was printed 1866 & subscriptions preceded that 1865 etc.].

    . James owns his house at 35 Ethel Ave., Grand Rapids & rents out 33 Ethel Ave., Grand Rapids, Michigan.

    . Hamilton, James, Dec. 28, 1863, Grand Rapids. Co. H. 1st C.I. Age 28 [ b.1835]
    (Published by Freedman's which was an organization to promote human rights -PJA.)
    Ref: Freedmen's Progress, by Francis H Warren, 1915 Detroit.,

    . 1869 Michigan Methodist Episcopal Church Annual Conference:
    Disciplinary Questions, What Preachers remain on trial? Jas. Hamilton.
    List of Probationers: J. Hamilton, Newaygo.

    . 1870 Apr 5 - Newaygo, MI. Justice Wm T Howell, aged 60y. Funeral series took place at the M E Church, in this village today at 10 o'clock & were of a very interesting character. Funeral discourse was preached by Rev M S Angell after which Rev Jam. Hamilton read a sketch of the life & public services of the deceased. Nearly all the business places of the village were closed during the funeral services & the large congregation present, testified that the deceased occupied a place in the public estimation which it will be difficult to till.
    (Newspaper quote from Newaygo.

    * 1870 Jul 11 Census Newaygo, Michigan
    Hamilton, James Age 27, 1843, Canada West, Methodist Clergy
    Hamilton, Alice J, Age 26, 1844, Penn.

    . 1871 October, 19, Grand Rapids, MI., James W Hamilton, naturalized citizen of the USA.
    . 1871 December 14, Local Events; Evening of the same day, donation for the benefit of Rev. J Hamilton.

    . METHODIST PREACHER; James Hamilton was the Methodist Minister for Allegan Village, MI. in 1872-4 Eaton Rapids Methodist Episcopal church. The membership of this church in Jul 1880 was about 275. Rev. James Hamilton is the pastor. A Sunday School is maintained with a large attendance.

    * 1880 Census Eaton Rapids, Michigan: James Hamilton, Minister, 37ys / b 1843, born Canada, Father b. Ireland, Mother, b Canada.

    . 1881 Sep 6 - Michigan 46th Annual Conference of the Methodist Church, J Hamilton, Eaton Rapids. Ref: Jackson Citizen Newspaper.
    . 1908 Sep 14 - Michigan Annual Conference of the Methodist Church, 1908 Sep 14, St. Joseph. Mich.: J W Hamilton.
    . 1899 Norton's Directory Berrien Co.: Hamilton, James Rev. James & wife, pastor M.E. Church, 411 Main. & James Hamilton, piano tuner, 310 Church; Miss Allie, 41 Main.
    James Hamilton, Jr., piano tuner, 411 Main.

    . The Lake Shore Commercial Record Newspaper, for the Saugatuck-Douglas, Michigan Area, Pub. every Saturday morning:
    1870 Oct 9 - His many friends will regret to learn that Rev G L Haight is to leave us. He goes to Otesego; Rev. A L Thurston comes here; Rev. J. Hamilton goes to Big Rapids.
    . 1883 Jul 22 - Some 20 or more of the voters of Ganges have signed a pledge to support only prohibitionists or official positions. The Rev. James Hamilton, of Ionia, lectured on Prohibition there on Monday evening.
    . 1883 Jul, 27 - Peach Belt Pick-Ups. The Rev J Hamilton, of Ionia, delivered a temperance lecture at the Baptist Church on Monday evening, it was well attended.

    . 1882 Oct 18 - Rev. James Hamilton, pastor of the M.E. church at Ionia, will speak in Opera Hall, this Friday, evening in favor of political prohibition. We sincerely hope he may be greeted with a full house. We do not in the least fear free discussion.
    . 1882 Oct 26 - Rev. James Hamilton, of Ionia, will speak in the interests of prohibition, at Salisbury Hall, on Friday evening, the I8th inst. Let him be greeted by a full house.
    Ref: The Times Newspaper. Owosso, MI.

    . 1887 Jun 7 - Temperance Mass Meeting, Eaton Rapids, Jul 6-6. The appeal urging the attendance of the noble, heroic woman who prayed & worked on that stormy April election day, the brave men of Detroit, who, in exercise of their God-given rights as citizens were boycotted, bulldozed, spit upon & hustled at the polls. It says: Come together under the oaks at Eaton Rapids & without the fear of the party bosses before your eyes, say what shall be done to this brutal & nefarious traffic whose existence is a menace to home, church & state so that the politicians will understand. This appear is signed by JH, president L.D.O.A.
    Ref: Jackson Citizen Patriot.

    . 1888 Jan 7 - 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.
    . 1888 Sep - Sunday services, St. Joseph pulpits were filled Sunday as per announcement: Methodist, Bishop Merrill in the morning, preceded by conference love feast conducted by Rev James Hamilton.
    . 1889 Jul 5 - Annual Mich. holiness camp meeting at Grand Rapids elected: Rev JH, Battle Creek.

    . 1892 Aug 6, Rev James Hamilton, Coldwater's popular young ME minister, came very near being killed on Thursday. He was doing from Battle Creek & whole passing through Union City his horse ran away, throwing him out & breaking sever ribs, besides inflict other serious injuries.
    Ref: Detroit Free Press.

    . 1893 Aug 4 -Rev. James Hamilton of Goldwater had his pockets picked of tickets & money to the extent of $15 while at the World's Fair.
    Ref: Owosso The Times & Detroit Free Press.
    . 1894 Jun 21 - The revival band of the ME church has been holding a national camp meeting at GR for the past week. Rev. James Hamilton, elected Vice-Presents.
    Ref: Muskegon Chronicle.

    . 1897 Jun 25 - Rev & Mrs James Hamilton visited the family of Mr John Osborne at Sodus Thursday.
    Note: James Hamilton & John Osborne were first cousins, once removed.
    Ref: News Palladium Newspaper, Benton Harbor, Mich.

    > 1894 Sept 15 -Revival Band mangers of ME church met this afternoon, Rev. James Hamilton, Grand Rapids, presiding. The society is to assist pastors in revival work During the 4 years it has been in existence the board reports, 12,000 converts at a cost not to exceed, $13,000, There are 30 minister & payment composing the officers & mangers & evangelistic corps has 25 workers.

    . c 1895 Family photo taken at Erin, Ontario Canada.

    . 1897 Sep 21 - Meth. Conference Trustees: James Hamilton & appt. to Niles District. - Rev. JH & son of Ann Arbor, were guests of Mr & Mrs. Bruce Simpson of Phelps Ave., Sunday. Ref: Kalamazoo Gazette.
    . 1889 Jul 4 -The fourth annual nicotine of the Michigan state holiness camp meeting association held at Eaton Rapids elected the following officers: Rev. James Hamilton, Battle Creek.

    . 1899 Sep - Famous matrimonial Mecca, Loving couples fly to St.Joe & the Rev James Hamilton does the rest. One of the most interesting personalities at ME church conference: Rev. James Hamilton of St. Joseph. While always modest & prone to efface himself except when the exigencies of the occasion required, his participation in debate, his shrewd common sense & dry wit always made his opinions influential in the formation of the decisions of the conference. .. money raiser. The Rev. Mr. Hamilton is best known as "the marrying parson". His record certainly justified the title. During the season just past, he admits to having averaged 5 weddings each Sunday & many during the week. The average is 20 in the city.
    St. Joseph," he said to the The Herald, during a lull in the conference last week, "has always been a good marrying city, but its importance as the matrimonial center of the west is a matter of the last year. Couples from Chicago & other parts of Illinois & may of the bordering states, have been accustomed to take the boat & make the trip to Milwaukee to be married, but the law of the state of Wisconsin now makes it obligatory for both parties to a marriage to present themselves 5 days before to take out license & this has had a depressing effect on business in the matrimonial in that city. The Graham & Mortin steamers put a special route from Chicago, from the opening of navigation ins spring till the chilling winds of the late fall & winter make travel on the lake a hardship.
    "I want you to correct the erroneous opinion that the greater part of these weddings are runaway affairs & elopements. The class of people who have visited St. Joseph for matrimonial purposes has been drawn almost entirely from the ranks of the middle class. They are people who do not desire to go to the expense of a large church wedding & its attendant troubles.' "$2 to $10 averaging for 1,000 weddings this year. Ref: Grand Rapids Herald.
    . 1899 Sep 20 - James Hamilton, St. Joseph Appointed to preach for the next year.
    * 1900 Sep 25 -Rev JH, the retiring Methodist minister, will continue to make his home in St. Joseph.
    . 1900 Oct 30 - Rev. JH of St. Joseph address delivered upon the Twentieth Century movement (education & care of superannuated ministers) which the church is now engaged in.

    * 1901 Mar 3 - Marriage Laws Defended. Rev. James Hamilton, formerly of St. Joseph, writes letter.
    St. Joseph, Mich., March 2, Special. Rev. James Hamilton of St. Joseph, for 4 years pastor of the Methodist church here, furnished a long letter to the Michigan Christian Advocate which is published in the current issue defending the present marriage laws of Mich. & controverting the theory that they have been abused in the "Gretna Green" so largely created by newspaper correspondents. He ways the current "senseless crusade" against the St. Joseph marriage business is based on misinformation; the the Meth. & Presbyterian conferences of the sate & district have taken no notice of the matter because they have been too well informed s to the facts to believe "the exaggerated reports of the newspapers; & that the little coterie of ministers of Joseph to meet with them & so acted in ignorance of the true facts Mr. Hamilton points out that the larger number of licenses issued here than in other counties is partly due to our proximity to Chicago & facilities for pleasant wedding trips across the lake. He claims that the St. Jos. clergymen have married only couples that have conformed to the law in every respect. Finally Mr. Hamilton says the present agitation was not called out by heartbroken mothers or deserted wives but simply because "St. Joseph is a popular place to get marred & the other fellows are not there." Ref: St. Joseph.

    . 1900 Feb 17 - St. Joseph: Rev. JH of this city, who was nominated by the prohibitionists for congress, declares he cannot engage in politics while in the ministry. Ref: Kalamazoo Gazette.
    . 1900 Feb 22 - the convention of the prohibition party of the Fourth congressional district the Rev. James Hamilton, pastor of the First Methodist Church of St. Joseph, was the unanimous choice for the nomination of Congressman. The convention was held at Plainwell. Mr. Hamilton
    says he will decline the nomination Ref: Crawford Avalanche Newspaper, Grayling, MI.

    . 1900 Oct 5 - Will Fight the Elders - St. Joseph has no idea of giving up the Marriage Industry. Oct 5. The Methodist ministers here a very indignant over the announcement that the Meth. body of Mich. will oppose the marriage business here. A committee has already been appointed to fight the presiding elders in their efforts to have the marriage law annulled by the coming legislature. The committee is composed of prominent clergymen & other influential parties. Fr. James Hamilton & Mr. French, the 2 Meth ministers her, consider the action of the elders of personal affront, Mr. French says that the idea of the elders that the marriage business here is horrible, is the rankest kind of rot & that no one but backwoodsmen would think of such a thing as involving the church & trying to get the legislature to annul the law. St. J. citizens will use money & influence against the killing the the present law. Ref: Kalamazoo Gazette.

    . 1901 Nov 8 - Rev. JH will preach at the M E Church next Sunday morning & evening.
    Ref: Paw Paw True Northerner Newspaper.

    News-Palladium (Benton Harbor, Michigan)
    . 1905 May 5 - Rev. James Hamilton of Grand Rapids is the guest of his son, H A Hamilton.
    * 1905 Sept 8 - Are Not Well Paid, Methodist Minister labor Principally for Love. Doing A Great Work. The Rev. JH of GR Praised. Charlotte Sept. of 32y minister in conference more than 2/3 receive less than $700 a year. Rev. James Hamilton, secretary of endowment fund was born in Canada in 1843. He came to Michigan in 1865. Hope ME collage in 1868. ..one of the leading men in Mich. Methodist.
    Cameo photo, wearing a dark jacket & stiff white shirt & white bow tie. - PJA
    Ref: Grand Rapids Press, Page 5.

    . 1905 Sept 9. The Clark Home accepted by the methodists for clergymen. Charlotte, Mich. Sept. 9 - A Friday's business session, accept $50,000 donation by M J Clarke of home in Grand Rapids for superannuated preachers. 12 trustees, Rev. James Hamilton. Rev. JH elected field secretary. His reported receipts for last year were $67,489.35 Ref: Daily Telegram.
    . 1905 Jun 10 - Rev. & Mrs. James Hamilton of Grand Rapids will spend Sunday in this city. (Benton Harbor).
    . 1905 June 12 - Of Public Interest - Rev. James Hamilton of Grand Rapids a former pastor of the Methodist church, of this city, occupied the pulpit both morning & evening yesterday on account of the absence of Rev W P Fraye.
    . 1905 June 26 - Rev J H of Grand Rapids, a former pastor of the Meth. church.
    . 1905 August 30 - Benton Harbor, Guest at the Hilborn home on Lake St. are Mrs. Hamilton (which?) of Grand Rapids & Mrs. McLaughlin of Chicago.
    . 1905 Sep 25 - Shepard, MI. - Rev. James Hamilton, D.D., agent for the 20th Century Conference Claimants' fund of the M. E. Church, preached at tho M. E. Church Sunday morning & at Pleasant Valley in the afternoon. Ref: Alma Record Newspaper.

    . 1906 Jun 21 - Rev. James Hamilton Gets Degree. Albion, June 21 - Rev. James Hamilton of Grand Rapids, formerly of St. Joseph was awarded the degree of divinity by the board of trustees at the annual meeting.
    . 1906 Jul 23 - James Hamilton of Grand Rapids is the guest of Mr. & Mrs. H Valentine this week. (Grand Rapids Evening News.)
    . 1907 October 22 - Benton Harbor, James Hamilton spent yesterday in the city, returning to Grand Rapids this morning.
    . 1907 October 28 - St. Joseph, Rev. & Mrs. James Hamilton of Grand Rapids are the guests of their son, Walter Hamilton & wife.
    . 1908 Oct 20 - Mr & Mrs Walter Hamilton left yesterday for Grand Rapids where they will be the guests of Mr. Hamilton's brother & wife, Mr. & Mrs. James Hamilton.
    . 1908 Mar 4 - Rev. JH of Grand Rapids spent Tuesday in this city. Ref: Alma Record Newspaper.
    . 1909 Jul 10 - Rev JH, D. D., of Grand Rapids, will preach at the Methodist church Sabbath morning & evening. Dr. Hamilton is a forceful & entertaining speaker & will have a message of unusual interest. Ref: Charlevois County Herald.

    . 1913 September 11 - Rev. J H returned to his home in GR today after several days' visit with relations & friends in the twin cities. Rev. H. was a former pastor of the First Methodist church in this city.
    . 1913 September 11- Rev. & Mrs. J H of RG returned home today, after attending the Pullen-Hall wedding.
    . 1913 September 13- ... several days visiting relatives & friends.

    * Grand Rapids Press:
    Rev. JH now on retired list, ...placed on retired list ...invited to deliver an import address at Washington Dec. Oct 28th, at a national conference of bishops. His topic will be "Methodist' youngest x institution, the board of Conference Claimants."
    Friday, Mr. Hamilton will leave for Canada to attend a general conference of Cdn. ME in Ottawa & to visit friends in the Dominion.

    . 1915 Apr 16 - Clark Memorial Methodist Church Row Breaks Out Anew at Sherman & Norwood Ave. Discordant notes were first sounded by Rev John Graham & Rev James Hamilton, 2 white headed ministers, ling in the east end who fought Rev Russel Breadys merger plant 2 years & since have taken the matter twice without success, to the annual conference. Despite final decrees from 2 bishops who south to have the church organization continued.
    . 1915 Apr 23 - Methodists set for big celebration. Rev James Hamilton who has led the state & national movement for veterans many years & raised more than $300,000 for the cause, has been invited to attend the Chicago convention as a guest with al expenses paid. He has been a member of the general conference board since its organization& out of 20,000 clergymen in the country he has served as one of the 3 who are on the national board, made up of 3 bishops, 3 ministers & 3 lay men. Subscriptions run above $10 million.
    . 1915 Sep 10, Hastings, Methodist annual conference, 2 fractions in the Grand Raids delegation locked horns in a bitter contest over seating delegates from the First church. The controversy is said to be an echo of the 3 year issue over the closing of Clark Memorial Church, in which Rev JG and Rev James Hamilton are deeply interested. Involved in it today were some of the veterans of many conflicts
    . 1915 Jun 1 - Walter A Hamilton, 618 Summer St., returned to Kalamazoo last night from Grand Rapids, where he has been at the bedside of his aged father, Rev James Hamilton, who is critically ill at his home in that city. Rev John Graham, past 80 years of age [b1835+], was behind the fight put up by his son to be seated in place of Whitworth, whose friends hoped to have him chose a Michigan delegate. Rev James Hamilton still is determined to have Clark Church problem pending & settled on a difference basis he says in fairness to the inmates of the home.
    . 1915 Aug 23 - Hastings. Annual Methodist Episcopal church meeting. Saturday Afternoon, Women's Home Missionary society: Rev JH, the president presiding address: My first Presiding Elder, Rev. Jun Graham, An Evangelistic Ministry.

    . 1915 Oct 22 - Apoplexy takes well known Grand Rapids Minister at sons's Florida Home. Rev John Graham on Friday rec. a telegram from Tampa Fla, that Rev JM had died there suddenly. ... News of Mr. Hamilton's death was a surprise in this city, yet not wholly unexpected, as he suffered from a stroke of apoplexy a year ago. Last Tuesday he went to Florida with Mrs. Hamilton to visit his son, James P Hamilton, formerly of Gr. It is believed the long journey was more than Mr. Hamilton, in frail health, was able to endure.
    Mr. Hamilton was born on a farm near Hamilton, Ont. about 72 years ago. It was nearly 50 years ago that the came to western Michigan [1865], joined the Methodist conference & after about 2 years study at Hope college, Holland, began his ministry at Newago. He had been a nurseryman in his youth & also held a first class certificate as a school teacher in Canada.
    Besides being pastor of Trinity church, GR, he spent the last 14 years of his active religious service, up to 2 years ago, as field secretary for conference claimants.
    ... He is survived by Mrs. Hamilton & 5 children, all married: James P & Allie of Tampa; Mary of Battle Creek, Walter of Kalamazoo & Fred who lives in the west.
    Formal portrait photo: Metal rimmed eye glasses, dark jacket with stiff white shirt & bow tie, somewhat more receded hairline since c1895 photo. - PJA.

    * Kalamazoo Gazette
    . 1915 Oct 15 - Rev James Hamilton Paralysis Victim, Father of Kalamazoo jeweler & well known Grand Rapids Pastor.
    Rev. James Hamilton of GR, prominent in the Michigan Methodist Episcopal conference & father of W A Hamilton of this city died suddenly Friday morning at the home of another son JP Hamilton, of Tampa, Fla., where he had gone on a visit. It is thought the cause of death was a stroke of paralysis.
    Mr. Hamilton was born in Trafalgar, Canada, February 17, 1843 & came to Michigan when 22 years of age. He was graduated from Hope college, Holland Mich. He was an ordained a minister of the Methodist Episcopal church & help pastorates in may Mich. cities, among them being Newago, Big Rapids, Allegan, St. Johns, Eaton Rapids, Ionia, Coldwater, Grand Rapids, St. Joseph & Battle Creek. While in charge of the First M E church in the latter city he was instrumental in the erection of the Maple St. ME church there. At one time he was presiding elder of the Lansing district.
    During his work in the interest of his Conference, Mr. Hamilton raised $180,000 for the 20th Century Preachers' Endowment fund. He was secretary of the board of trustees of the Clark memorial home at GR & was field secretary for the Conference Claimants' fund.
    Mr. Hamilton is survived by 5 children: W A Hamilton of this city. J P Hamilton of Tampa, Fla, Mrs James G Redner of Battle Creek, E A Hamilton of Colorado Springs, Col., 3 sisters, Mrs. Kenneth Ransom of Tampa Florida, Mrs. Mary Jane Warner of Big Rapids & Miss Elizabeth Hamilton of Big Rapids. AT Hall of Benton Harbor, is a brother-in-law.
    The fboy will be taken to Battle Creek where the funeral will be held in the First M E church, Battle Ck., at 3 o'clock, Monday afternoon. Rev A E Craig of Sioux City, IA. officiating. A large number of people from this city as well as Methodist ministers & laymen from other parts of the sate will attend the funeral.
    Ref: Kalamazoo Gazette, Kalamazoo Gazette & also published 1915 Oct 23- Sat., Page 8, Grand Rapids Herald., St. Joseph Daily Press.

    . 1915 Oct 25, Memorial Service for Rev JH at Clark Memorial Methodist church next Sunday is expected a memorial service will be held for Rev JH, who died last Friday at Tampa, Fla. Rev. John Graham will conduct the service & address will be made by other speakers. A large number of local Methodists went to Battle Creek Monday to attend the funeral of Mr. Hamilton.
    . 1915 Nov 1, Rev JH Eulogized by Friends. A large congregation attend the memorial Service Sunday at Clark Memorial ME Church, JH died 10 days go & for many years had been prominently associated in Methodist affairs in Grand Rapids & Michigan. Resides relatives of the deceased minister from Battle Creek, there were prints Revs. JG, Robt H Bready, JW Horner, Al Smith, S C Strickland.
    Dr John Graham gave the principal address, recalling the quality of character in him who had died. He knew Mr. Hamilton when they were young men together in Canada, was at the service in which Mr. Hamilton professed conversion & had been associated with him during his entire ministerial career. Dr. Hamilton had been a district superintendent, 3 times elected to gen. conference & chose by bishops on conference claimants. His most enduring work was hat of helping to found the local Clark Memorial Home for the Aged.
    Note2: Rev John Graham, b 1835.12.4 Sterling Scotland -1920.12.27 Grand Rapids, MI. Settled near Hamilton, Ont., Landed Mich. 1863, Methodist conference 1869 ME Bap. Reg: Ontario Methodist Baptism: Thos. Ebenezer Graham, b 1850.12.5, Bap 1851. 3.23, s/o John & Mary, Watertown, E Flamboro.

    . OBITUARY1, Methodist Michigan Tribunal Conference 1916, Summary
    Rev. James Hamilton, D.D., more than 47 y. member of Mich. conference.
    Died Tampa Florida, Oct 22, 1915, in his 73 year, stricken with apoplexy some months before. went to Tampa, Florida in autumn. Son of James & Rebecca Hamilton of Canada. Born at Trafalgar, Ontario, Feb. 17, 1843. When 14 years [1858] he was deeply convicted & soundly converted to God. Those who knew him & saw the intellectual, the spiritual trend of the youth, said there was a future for him, presumably the ministry, nor was this a mere presumption, as we are told how his God-fear mother dedicated him to the service of the pulpit before he was born.

    Came to Michigan in 1865, student in Hope College for 2 years, after which he joined the Mich. conference at Three Rivers in 1868. His appointments: Newaygo, Big Rapids, Allegan, Ovid, St. Johns, Eaton Rapids, Ionia, Lansing District, Battle Creek, Coldwater, Trinity church Grand Rapids & St. Joseph. After 32y, he became the field sec. of 20th Century Thanks Offering Movement, 14 years plans, statesmanlike wisdom, courage, faith. endowment funds ... Quick & incisive in debate.
    He was a model husband, thoughtful, dutiful, affectionate. He loved children & gave his best effort for their comfort & improvement. A widow 3 sons, 2 daughters, 2 sisters.

    . OBITUARY2, Roll of the Dead, HAMILTON, James K, 72y old, died yesterday at the home of this son James P Hamilton, near Sulphur Springs.The son is the senior member of the Hamilton-Green Piano Co. A retired minister, the elder Mr. Hamilton was well known in church circles in Michigan. He arrived in Tampa Thursday apparently in good health but dies that night of heart failure.
    He is survived by a widow & 3 son, 2 daughters. The sons are H A Hamilton of Colorado Springs, Col., W A Hamilton of Kalamazoo, Mich. & J P Hamilton, Tampa. Daughters are Mrs. KW Ranson of Indian Rocks & Mrs. James G Redner, Battle Creek, Mich.
    Funeral services were held at 4 yesterday afternoon.

    The remains were shipped last nigh to the former home in battle Creek, where the interment will be made. They were accompanied by J P Hamilton, his son, of this city.

    . OBITUARY. DEATH OF MRS REV. JAMES HAMILTON: the Grand Rapids Mich., Press gives particulars of the death at her son's home at Tampa, Florida o Nov 30th, of Mrs Alice Hamilton, widow of Rev James Hamilton, who was pastor of Trinity M E Church in Grad Raids about 5 years ago. Mrs Hamilton is survived by 3 sons, James P Hamilton, Tampa; W A Hamilton of kalamazoo & Red Hamilton, in Oklahoma. There are 2 dau. Mrs Kennth Ransom of Tampa & Mrs James Redner of Battle Creek.
    Mr. Hamilton dies about 3 years ago in Tampa. He was a native of Acton , a brother of Richard Hamilton, contractor, who lived her for many years & then went to Erin. Rev Dr. Hamilton was a frequent visitor to Acton & friends here.
    Ref: Acton Free Press, Acton, Ontario.
    Research & transcriptions by PJ Ahlberg. Thank you. - - -

    Birth:
    Ref: Cdn. Meth. Baptisms Cert: 1842. Monument reads born Feb 17 1843 - Dec 22 1915.

    Died:
    COD: Apoplexy, stricken several months before, d. at son J P Hamilton's .

    Buried:
    Section P, Lot 36, Rt 14., 255 South Ave., Battle Creek.

    James married Alice Josephine HALL on 13 Sep 1869 in Niles, Berrien Co., Michigan. Alice (daughter of Oliver HALL and Emily EASTMAN) was born on 15 Sep 1843 in Erie, Erie Co., Pennsylvania; died on 29 Nov 1923 in Grand Rapids, Kent Co., Michigan; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Alice Josephine HALL was born on 15 Sep 1843 in Erie, Erie Co., Pennsylvania (daughter of Oliver HALL and Emily EASTMAN); died on 29 Nov 1923 in Grand Rapids, Kent Co., Michigan; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery.

    Notes:

    Alice J. is the daughter of Emily Eastman, born (Bridgewater?), Oneida Co., NY. & Oliver Hall, born NH.

    . Census 1880: Alice J Hamilton, Wife keeping house, 36 yrs/ b 1844, Born Penn. Father b. New Hampshire, Mother b. New York
    They resided St. Johns, Clinton Co., Michigan.

    News-Palladium (Benton Harbor, Michigan)
    . 1910 August 27 - August 27, 1910 Mr. & Mrs. JH & Two children, who have been spending the summer at their summer home at Royalton Heights, leave on Monday for their home in Grand Rapids.

    . 1913 Sept 11- Pullen-Pennsylvania; Wedding. One of the most charming of mid season weddings was that of Miss Florence Ethel Hall, daughter of Mr. & Mrs. A T Hall & Mr A Ray Pullen of Palmetto, Fla. Wed at 4:33 p.m. at the home of the bride's parents at 216 Brunson Ave. Rev. N A McClune officiating.
    Floral decorations in the parlour where the marriage was solemnized ...Mrs. B S Frost "Beloved, it is Morn, by Alyward & "Love's Enchantment" by Batten. Mr. Harold Hall, brother of bride played the wedding march from Lohengrin. Mr. Pullen the groom & Mr. Frank Hall brother of bride …best man, led processional down the stairway. White lingerie dress & long handled baskets of white blossoms. Miss Ha? Hall sister of bride, was maid of honor.
    Out of town guests were Miss Harriet Wilson of Berwyn, Ill, Mrs. F J Fuller & son Lawton, Mr & Mrs. W A Hamilton, Kalamazoo; Rev & Mrs. James Hamilton of Grand Rapids, Mrs. Harris & Mr. Dickenson of Coloma.
    Wedding trip to Chicago, Mammoth Cave, KY, Chattanooga , Ten., Jacksonville Fla. & others points. Mr & Mrs. Pullen will be at home in Palmetto, Fla., ...Mr. Pullen's orange grove. Mrs. Pullen has been a successful teacher in the local public schools... grad of Kalamazoo Normal college. ... leaving Benton H. for home, miss in First Meth. church circles.
    Grand Rapids Directory.
    . 1916 - Alice J Hamilton, Wid. Rev. James. H. 435 Ethel Ave.; & also a second 1816 entry at: 1415 Sherman.
    . 1921 - Tampa, Florida Directory
    Alice J Hamilton, Wid James, h. Hamilton Heath.

    Muskegon Chronicle:
    Set 7 1915 - Mr & Mrs James Hamilton & 2 daughters, 252 Grand Ave, have returned for a trip to Delton, Michigan.

    . Obituary: Mrs Alice J Hamilton
    Funeral services for the late Mrs Alice J Hamilton, who died Sat. at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Kenneth M Ransom, at Indian Rock. Fla., will be held at 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon at the home of her daughter, Mrs. James G Redner, in Country Club Hills, in charge of the Rev Charleton Brooks Miller, paster of the First Congregational church. Burial will take place in Oak Hill.
    Mrs. Hamilton was 83 & was born North East. PA. When quit a young girl she came to Niles, where she completed her education & where she was teaching school at the time of her marriage to Rev James Hamilton, whose death occurred 11 years ago.
    All their married life was spend in Michigan a Mr. Hamilton was a minister in the Methodist church & was at one time pastor of the First M E Church of this city. Following the death of her husband, Mrs. Hamilton, made her home with her daughter, Mrs James Redner of Battle Creek, going south winters to be with her son James P. Hamilton. Four years ago it was thought best for her to remain permanently in the south & she became a member of the household of her other daughter, Mrs. Kenneth M Ransom at Indian Rock, where she had since lived.
    Mrs Hamilton is survived by 3 sons & 2 daughters:
    W A Hamilton of Kalamazoo; James P Hamilton of Tampa; Alfred H Hamilton, Colorado Springs, Mrs James G Redner of Battle Creek & Mrs Kenneth M Ransom, of Indian Rock, Fla. There are 13 grandchildren & one great grandchild.
    The body was brought north by the 2 sons W A Hamilton & James P Hamilton, who were joined at Chicago by their brother, Alfred H Hamilton of Colorado Springs. They are expected to arrive some time this afternoon.

    . Corr. of Pension: 521 Sherman St., Grand Rapids, Mich., Oct 29/ 04.
    Dear Sir:
    I am a granddaughter of Joseph Eastman, Jr. & write to learn if his name appears on the Pension rolls of New York, Connecticut or Vermont, as a soldier in the Revolutionary War.
    He was born in 1756 & with his father, Joseph Eastman, Sr. & 2 brothers Hezekial & Nathaniel, was in the Battle of Danbury, Conn., near which town he then lived.
    I have been told by my aunts that he was in the Revolutionary war 3 years & that he was a pensioner of that war.
    I think it was during the war that his branch of the Eastman family removed from Conn., then Waterville, Oneida Co., N.Y.
    In what regiment, for how long a time he served, I do not know authentically: any data that your department may furnish will be thankfully received.
    I am very respectfully yours, Mrs. Rev. James Hamilton.
    Rec. Nov 1, 1904, US Pension Office
    Note: Written in the clear well space hand of Alice J Hall Hamilton. - - -

    Birth:
    Alt Location: Philadephia.

    Buried:
    Section P Lot 36, Rt. 13. Small grey granite well clear monument.

    Notes:

    Married:
    Berrien Co. Reg # 805, Reg. on 24 Sept 1869. James A Hamilton's occupation was clergyman. Wit. Leora O Hall, Niles, MI.

    Children:
    1. Walter Alexander HAMILTON was born on 3 Jul 1869 in Newaygo, Newago Co., Michigan; died on 17 Jul 1959 in Battle Creek, Calhoun Co., Michigan; was buried on 20 Jul 1959 in Oak Hill Cemetery.
    2. James Perrine JIMMIE HAMILTON, .5 was born on 19 Oct 1871 in Big Rapids, Mecosta Co., Michigan; died in 1953 in San Francisco, San Mateo Co., California.
    3. Mary Evelyn HAMILTON, .3 was born in Jun 1873 in Eaton Rapids, Eaton Co., Michigan; died on 14 Jul 1948 in Battle Creek, Calhoun Co., Michigan; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery.
    4. Herman Alfred FRED HAMILTON was born on 5 Oct 1874 in Grand Rapids, Kent Co., Michigan; died on 15 Nov 1938 in Colorado Springs, El Paso Co., Colorado; was buried in Redford Cemetery.
    5. 1. Alice Grace ALLIE HAMILTON, .2 was born on 15 Jun 1879 in St. Johns, Clinton Co., Michigan; died in 1941 in Anona Twp., Pinellas Co., Florida; was buried in Anona Pioneer Cemetery.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  James HAMILTON, Sr. was born on 23 Jun 1801 in Drumragh, Co. Tyrone, Ireland (son of James HAMILTON, .1 and Mrs. Mary HAMILTON, .1); died on 1853 - 1858 in Chinguacousy Twp., Peel Co., Ontario.

    Notes:

    PART ONE:

    James Hamilton, born 23 June 1801, Baptized 28 Jan 1801, at Church of Ireland (Anglican), Drumragh Old Church, Blackfort Road, Drumragh Townland, Drumragh, County Tyrone.
    Father James Hamilton, Mother not listed. (The graveyard is also called Drumragh Graveyard.)
    . Strabane is situated in the civil parish of Donacavey. The relevant Church of Ireland, Anglican, records are divided between the following parishes: Bar, Clanabogan & Findonagh, or The relevant Presbyterian records are in Fintona.

    . 1828 Jul 4, LANDED: James Hamilton, Steerage Passenger Ticket 46, Cost: £2 15s 6s, Paid.
    Departure: Quebec, Lower Canada, Arrival Montreal, Lower Canada.
    Vessel: St. Lawrence Steamship fee was 11th Tup. upwards.
    Note1: Well not definitively verified that this is our James Hamilton, however, he is the only James Hamilton listed for 1828 (single, i.e. no wife or family accompanying him.)

    . Hamilton J. H., in Canada Company's office, 4 Richmond St., [1833.]
    . Hamilton James, Land Agent, King St. West [1837 Directory]
    . & perhaps also: Hamilton, James, Camelion Tavern, Church St. Toronto
    . (purchased:) Hamilton James, Con 4 Lots 4 & 5; Con 3, Lot 22, Chinquacousy Twp., E of Hurontario Street.

    1837 Toronto & Home District Directory
    . Tavernkeeper at George Third Inn, Town of York & Camelion Tavern 1837.
    . Hamilton, Ja's, Con 4, Lot 4*, Chinguacousy, East of Hurontario Street
    . Hamilton, James, Con 4, Lot 5, Chinguacousy East, Halton Co., Ontario
    . Hamilton, James, Con 4, Lot 1, Chinguacousy East
    . Hamilton, James, Con 3, Lot 22, Chinguacousy East.

    Note2: * On the adjoining Lot 4, but in Con 3 was located Aeneas Shaw, Jr. - his father (Col.) Major A Shaw Senior, was an American Revolution acquaintance & gave reference for John Willson, the grandfather of Mrs. Rebecca Lawrence Hamilton'.
    Previous owner C4 L4: The early tax assessment rolls (beginning in 1827) & the 1851 & 1861 census enumerations for Chinguacousy list several residents with "square lumber" & "plank" dwellings. This is evidence that plank construction was feasible during this early period. The James Forrest mill on Lot 4, Concession 4, WHS, is listed in the 1827 tax roll. It is not known if the Forrest mill or a more distant mill was in operation by 1822. If built by 1822 using sawn planks, the subject dwelling would be among the earliest examples of plank construction in the township.
    Ref: Heritage Background Report - Plank Dwelling (LeFlarpland House), City of Brampton, 2012.9.77. for Lot 9, Con 4, Chinguacousy.

    Note3: Now 12911 Creditview Rd., 1875, brick farm house. Ref: H54.3.
    Address reference point: is now near Mayfair United Church. Originally the 3rd Line.
    Lot W1/2 Lot 23, Con 3 is now & 13089 Creditview Rd.
    Part E. half Lot 24, Con 4, # 13278 Creditview Rd., the Taylor - Eclin House)
    Part E. half Lot 23, Con 4 is now # 1488 Old School Rd. near Mississauga Rd., the 1879 Sharpe Schoolhouse).

    . 1840, Jul 16, Thus. - Heir & Devisee Claim 213
    James Hamilton of Chinguacousy Twp. & William McConnell of the same place, yeoman, claims as executors in the WILL of James Hamilton, deceased.*
    Lot East half 5, Con. 4 East of H. Street, Chinguacousy, Home District, Original Nominee James Hamilton, Claim allow.
    Ref: Upper Canada Heir & Devisee, H1151, p202, Archives of Canada.
    Note4* Perplexing!
    This would seem to imply James Hamilton Senior was the executor of HIS father's will. No mention of is found in the two Hamilton biography's about his father accompanying him to Canada. It is a little too much of a co-incidence that our James Hamilton would live on the same Lot 5, Con 4 as another James Hamilton. Further research is required. - P J Ahlberg.

    . 1852 Agricultural Census Chinguacousy Twp., Peel Co., Ontario
    Hamilton, Con. 4, Lot 1, Chinguacousy, 100 Acres, 75 A. cultivated 43 A. under crops in 1851; 31 A under pasture 1851, 1 A. garden or orchard; 25 A under wild wood; 25 A. produced 400 bushels of wheat.
    4 A. produced 80 Bsh peas; 4A. produced 150 bsh. oats; 10 Acres produced 15 tons of hay, 47 lbs. wool; 5 bulls, oxen or steers, 5 milch cows, 5 horses, 24 sheep, 4 pigs, 300 lbs. beef; 21 cwts. Pork.
    > REMARKS on the January 1852 CENSUS, written by Allen Bowfield (b. c1825, also farmer in Chingoucousy.)
    In reference to the soils: The nature of the soil will be best explained by stating that there are 2 kinds of land in the ward. The one may be called sandy loam. In the neighbourhood of which soil in a few cases most excellent building sand is founded. The sandy loam with sharp subsoil grows good wheat, barley & peas; The other goes by the name of clay land has a deep black top soil with heavy clay below. Grows first rate vegetables as good crops of hays & oats. Ward No. 2 is not as favourably situated for water as some localities. In many instances the farmer depends principally upon the well. The water of which is generally of superior quality. There are a few living streams. On one of which there is a grist mill. Incapable, however of doing must dry weather for want of bountiful supply of water. The average valve of land throughout the Ward is about £7 per acre.
    Note5: - No Fulled cloth or linen or Flannel. i.e. James Hamilton no longer weaving.
    . James Hamilton owned an high number of animals in comparison with most neighbors whose average was 2 bulls, 4 milk cows & double the number of sheep! These were likely raised for the market. Also indicates a dependable water supply. Not for nothing was James Hamilton a Canada Land Agent. - PJA 2011.

    . 1877 Peel Co. Atlas
    Richard Hamilton, Farmer, Settled 1831, Brampton Post office, 1877 [deeded from his father?]
    Mrs. Hamilton, Con 2, NDS, Lot 11, 100 Acres, non-resident 1877, Non Resident;
    Ada Hamilton, Con 4 E, Lot 2, Chinguacousy South, (now Peel Co.), 50 Acres, Non Resident.
    Note6: By 1855 Transferred by his WILL: Richard Hamilton, Con 4 Lot 4, freeholder, Chinguacousy Twp. Halton. &
    James Hamilton, Con 4, Lot 1, Chingoucousy Twp.;
    John Hamilton, Con 4, Lot 5 also a John Hamilton Con 6, Lot 25 house. Chinguacousy Twp. [i.e. Caledon]
    Note7: Concession 4 East is now located between Bramalea Rd. & Heart Lake Road, Peel Co., it was split in half, with the northern half becoming part of the town of Caledon & the southern half, along with the township of Toronto Gore, joining the town of Brampton. - PJA 2010.

    PART TWO

    . 1912 BIOGRAPHY

    BIOGRAPHY1: James Hamilton, the father of Alexander Hamilton, was born in County Tyrone, near Strabane, Ireland & came to Canada in 1828. Shortly after emigrating he was married to Rebecca Lawrence. In Ireland he had been engaged in linen weaving, but immediately on coming to Canada took up farming & later went into the real estate business. He was successful in both these ventures & might have become a wealthy man if he had not placed too much confidence in his friends & wreaked his own fortune by going security for others. At his death there was nothing left for his wife & family of seven children, all of whom were under age.

    For further research: In 1861 wife Rebecca Lawrence Hamilton was the toll keeper on the Snake Road, at Burlington. The toll house belong to the Hamilton & Milton Road Company. Did James have business dealings with the Hamilton & Milton Rd. Co.? - PJA.

    . Summary: Hamilton & Flamborough Road Co. vs. Binkley for the recover of $10 toll paid by him. The plaintiffs' toll-gate being the only one on their Townline or Brock Road, 6 miles in length.
    Hamilton & Brock Road Co. was incorporated 1853 Dec 5 to construct a plank, macadamized graveled road from the Upper Burlington Bridge at Freeman's Tavern on Brock Rd., between the Twps. of East & West Flamborough.' Later on 1867 Dec 9 they amalgamated with Hamilton, Waterdown & Carlise Rd. to be called the Hamilton Milton Road Co.
    Ref: Ontario Reports, Vol. 9, Ontario High Court of Justice, 1885. . - .

    PART THREE: 1892 BIOGRAPHY2:

    ALEXANDER HAMILTON. This gentleman is one of the influential & respected residents of Ganges Twp., Allegan County, (Michigan) residing on section 20. He is extensively engage in fruit-growing & the nursery business. He was born October 3, 1836, in Halton County, Canada, to James & Rebecca Hamilton.

    James Hamilton was born in the North of Ireland & was there reared to farm pursuits, his education being limited to the common schools. In early life, he learned the linen weaver's trade, but never followed his trade after coming to America, which was about 1828. He locate in Halton, Canada, where he was married to Rebecca Lawrence, a daughter of Capt. Richard Lawrence. Her father died when she was very young & she was reared by an older sister. Nine children were given to this couple, two of whom died when young.

    Those living are Richard, of Canada,
    Note8: He resided Acton - died Erin, Ontario;

    Alexander, our subject;
    Mary J., wife of Samuel Wanner;
    Hadassah, widow of John McCutcheon;
    Note9: John McCutcheon, born Ontario - died 28 Mar 1911.
    The Rev. James, of Coldwater, Michigan, William J., of Canada & R. Lizzie.

    Although James Hamilton lived on a farm in Canada, yet his general business was dealing in real estate. Both in Ireland & in Canada, he was a member of the Orangeman's Society. He died in 1858, his wife living until 1890. The parents of James Hamilton were James & Mary Hamilton, natives of the North of Ireland, but of Scotch descent.

    Our subject began working out at the age of 17, at the death of his father.
    Note10: If Alexander were born in 1836 + 17 years, means James Hamilton died 1853 (or more possibly in 1854, owing to the conflict of Alexander's date of birth.)

    He was the oldest son at home & help to educate his younger brothers & sisters. He completed his own education after the age of 21 years (c.1857-8).
    [More of this biography continues under this brother, Alexander Hamilton, 1892 Biography.]
    Ref: Portrait & Biographical Record of Kalamazoo, Allegan & Van Buren Counties, Michigan. Printed 1892, Chicago, p. 728.

    Linen Weaving in Ireland
    The preparation of an acre of flax for the spinning wheel required 8 days' work, at different intervals, utilizing 4 men & 8 women & two horses. The profit resulting from an acre of flax land, sowing the crop & converting it at harvest into 11 webs of linen was about 6 pounds. It was the most expensive of all crops, particularly in wet seasons.
    The making of linen in Ulster was a domestic industry, carried on in the country home & was organized within the family hierarchy. The father wove, did the marketing & any business associated with it & trained his sons when they were of an appropriate age. The men also did some supplementary farming or fishing, depending on the locality & circumstances. The mother looked after the house, spun the flax, taught the younger children to prepare it for her & in due course trained her daughters in her skills.
    During the first half of the 19th century the greatest social problem in Ireland was the problem of poverty, as illustrated in Table 1. Large areas of land were under the control of landowners living in England. The average wage for farm laborers in Ireland was eight pence (8d) a day. This was only a fifth of what could be obtained in the United States & those without land began to seriously consider emigrating to the New World. 
    Despite a persistent lobby of support, a major scheme for state-aided emigration was not attempted. A very modest experiment in 1823-5 (about 2,000 were sent to Canada at a cost to the government of over £20 a head) caused misgivings about the prohibitive costs of such schemes & in any case the increasing flow of voluntary emigration suggested that State intervention was not needed. Distressed weavers, particularly from Scotland & the north of England, were also assisted to settle in Canada. The average ocean voyage that season was about 45 days; some vessels took more than 60 days in crossing.
    Ref: Ordinance Survey Memoirs of Ireland, Parishes of Co. Londonderry; & Ireland Before the Famine, G. O Tuathaigh. - - -

    Birth:
    Drumragh Parish, born 'near Strabane'. Alt Name: J H Hamilton.

    Died:
    Note: Two biographies give different death dates.

    James married Rebecca LAWRENCE, DUE in c 1831-33 in Halton County, Ontario. Rebecca (daughter of Lieut. Richard LAWRENCE, , UE and Mary WILLSON, 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. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Rebecca LAWRENCE, DUE was born on 4 May 1815 in Town of York (Toronto), York Co., Ontario (daughter of Lieut. Richard LAWRENCE, , UE and Mary WILLSON, DUE); died on 17 Feb 1890 in Ganges, Allegan Co., Michigan; was buried in Taylor Cemetery.

    Notes:

    . The 1892 Biography of Alexander Hamilton says his grandmother died when Rebecca was but young & she was raised by an older sister. The most like possibilities for the 'older sister' could be:

    1. Elizabeth Lawrence Tarbox, living in 1821 at Caledon East, Peel Co. & fairly close to James Hamilton at his farm in Chinguagousy Twp., Peel; or is Rebecca was still in Toronto with:

    2. Second eldest sister, Margaret Lawrence Johnston, who lived at 179 King St. East, Toronto, which is based on Richard Hamilton, Rebecca's eldest son's statement that he was born in Toronto. King St. was a principal street in Toronto, where indeed, James Hamilton would have done business with the Canada Land Company.

    . DOB 1815; UCLP at age 18, Married c 1833, at about age 18; First child at c. 19 years old.

    UCLBooks, 1833 Feb 7, Thursday, York Council Chamber, Present Peter Robinson, Geo. H. Parkland, Jos. Wells.
    Rebecca Hamilton, Petition H179, Wife of James Hamilton of Toronto, Yeoman. Praying for a grant of 200 Acres of land, as the Daughter of the late Richard Lawrence, formerly of York, an U.E. Loyalist. Recommended.
    Ref: UCLBook, C105 p 354. Note1: Rebecca was age 17y 9m 3d.

    . Upper Canada Land Petition #179, 1818 Apr 14,
    Patented: 1833 Jul 4: Lot 7, Con 18, Garafraxa Twp., [Gore District], Wellington Co., Ontario.
    * [ later transferred to EAST Garafraxa Twp, in Dufferin Co.]
    Witnesses to Oath of Rebecca Hamilton, Page 179a, C2052, Home District (Toronto),
    We, D'Arcy Boulton the Quarter Chairman & Steven Washburn … Clerk of the Peace certify that Rebecca Hamilton personally appeared at the general quarter Sessions of the Peace in & for said Home District this day & is recognized by the Magistrate to be a Daughter of the late Richard Lawrence of the Township of Harwich in the Western District of London, formerly of the Twp. of York, deceased, who retained his Loyalty during the late war [1812] without suspicion of without suspicion of aiding or assisting the Enemy. Dated at the Court House of York (Toronto), the 28th day of February, 1833.

    Quarterly Session of Peace, Home District:
    . 1833 Feb 28, Thurs. Present D'Arcy Boulton Jun, Esq. Chairman, Grant Powell, Esq. JP, Clerk of Peace having reported to Court that the Grand Jury summoned them for 1 O'clock this day. Report of David Gibson, Surveyor of Hwys. granted. Rebecca Hamilton appeared in open-Court & was recognized to be the Daughter of the late Richard Lawrence, deceased, an United Empire Loyalist, whereupon a certificate was signed.

    . 1834 Dec 19, UC Sundries, Petition of Rebecca & James Hamilton of the Twp. Nassagaweya,
    Petitioner Rebecca Hamilton, the daughter of a UE Loyalist received a grant of Lot 7, Con 18, Garafraxa Twp.
    Petitioners are residing & cultivating a lot of land in Nassagaweya Twp. , upon which he has nearly 40 Acres of improvement. In consequence of possessing this farm, they are from the distance of the grant, unable to quit their present residence & become occupiers of the Garafraxa Lot. Yet your petitioners part to allow a deed to be issued, upon the grounds they are already settlers in the very District in which the grant is, the value of the same is of importance to them, for the provision their family. Should it be the pleasure of your Excellency to grant them title, the land will be improved by having the power to let it on lease, otherwise your petitioners cannot occupy in person the Lot & will be subject for forfeiture.
    Signed for Jas. & Rebecca Hamilton, City of Toronto, 29 Dec 1834, Tos. Talbot.
    Envelope: Referred to Comm of Lands to report therein. 31 Dec 1834.
    . Cannot be granted under present regulations.1835 Apr 8, John Robison, Com. of Crown Lands Office, Toronto. Forward the report.
    Ref: UC Sundries C6884, p1279.
    Note2: Lot 18 SW Con 7 was granted 1824.9.21 Patent to Ann Headly & the NE half patent was granted 1824.922 to Jesse Meredith.

    . Land Registration Office Dufferin County,
    Lot 7, Con 18, East Garafraxa Twp. Abstract Book B20, p42.
    . 1836 Mar 11, Patent, crown to Rebecca Hamilton Hamilton, Rebecca.
    . 1836 Jun 16, Registered 1836 Jun 29, BN&S, James Hamilton & his wife Rebecca Hamilton, to James Pattulo, 200 Acres.
    . 1879 Mar 28, Bargain&Sale James & Robert A. Pattullo, to Kenneth Pattullo, [to both each]. All the timber on 10 acres with right of way.

    Note3: Purchaser: James Pattullo. Others settlers began to arrive at an early period, doubtless sent forward by the enterprising Land Agent at York. In the autumn of 1820 Alexander Pattullo, native of Prestonpems, near Edinburg, but more recently a resident of Glasgow, arrived at Rockside, having left behind him his wife & family of 3 sons & 2 daughters, wile he spied out the land & prepared a home for them. In a letter from Paisley dated Apr 2, 1823 he stated that a young man James Pattullo who was about to emigrate to Canada & intended to settle in Caledon along with his father who had preceded him, offered to convey letters.
    Ref: Rockside Pioneers.

    . Biography: At James Hamilton's death there was nothing left for his wife & family of 7 children, all of whom were under age. It was in this crisis that Alexander Hamilton's sterling character made itself evident. Though but 18 years old, [1854 or 55], he assumed the care of the family & until the day of his death none of them ever went to him in vain for assistance of any sort. His devotion to his mother was particularly beautiful, & even when the others were able to contribute to her comfort he never yielded his privilege of being the first to bear burdens in her behalf; & this even when hard times often made it difficult to provide for his own family as he wished.
    Husband James Hamilton died about 1856 to 1858. 'He might have become a wealthy man if he had not placed too much confidence in his friends & wreaked his own fortune by going security for others.' So this would have been a timely investment for him or the widow Rebecca Hamilton. Perhaps the tollgate didn't live up to expectations for development. In the meantime, son Rev. James Hamilton moved to Michigan & number of close relatives were also in Michigan too.
    . Rev. James Hamilton, Jr. "God-fear mother dedicated him to the service of the pulpit before he was born" in Feb. 17, 1843, Trafalgar, Ontario. . -.

    * XRef: This biography continues at 1892 & 1912 Biographies of Alexander Hamilton & at James Hamilton.

    Note4: Husband James Hamilton died in 1855 probably in Esquesing Co., Halton County, Ontario. Rebecca had moved to Flamborough Twp., Wentworth County by the time son James Hamilton was baptized a Methodist.
    By 1856 son Richard L Hamilton was living alone in a log cabin near Acton, Ontario. He was working as a carpenter, no doubt earning money to help support his family.
    In 1864 Alex Hamilton went to Ohio & afterward to Michigan to make fruit farm to Saughatuck, MI. Mary Jane Hamilton landed in the US in 1866 so it would seem probably she would have lived with her mother Rebecca, at least up to that time.

    . 1859 Flamborough West, Canada West., Tp. in Co. Wentworth. For office Post office see: Strabane.
    Ref: The New World in 1859: Being the US & Canada.

    . 1861 March Census, East Flamborough, Wentworth Co., Ontario, Broken Part Lot 14, 2nd East Concession,
    Rebecca Hamilton, age 46, Toll House, W. Methodist, Widow, One half story frame house. *Family member ABSCENT on Census day.
    Alex Hamilton, Age 23, b 1838, Nursery Agent, born Upper Canada, W. Methodist.
    Richard Hamilton, Age 26, b 1835, Carpenter, born Upper Canada, frame house. *Family member ABSCENT on Census day.
    Mary Jane Hamilton, Age 22 b1839, Labourer
    Hadassah Hamilton, Age 19, 1842 UC [No occupation listed], *Family member ABSCENT on Census day.
    James Hamilton, Age 17 b1844, Nursery Agent, attending school. *Family member ABSCENT on Census day.
    Wm. J Hamilton, Age 15 b1846, Labourer, attending school.
    Rebecca Hamilton, Age 7, b1854, attending school.

    . Description of Flamborough tollhouse: Neighbor murdered previous to Rebecca Hamilton taking up the house which was: The tollhouse is quite a small room & the ceiling is very low & usually a lock was applied to the door. Woodrack rails, likely cedar, surrounded the tollhouse; there was plenty of room in the shanty to stoke a blow with the stick; a 6 o'clock sounded in neighboroughood! Undoubtedly there would be quite a bit of gossip about the tollhouse where Rebecca & family lived.

    . 1857 Jan 29th, Extracted from a previous coroner's murder inquest that took place:
    The day previous at a shan't on the New Waterdown road, near Burlington Heights, where John Lawry killed another man supposed to have gone to the shanty for the purpose of robbing awry of his money. Lawry is about 60 years of age & Hopkins near as old.
    John Smith, a teamster, was going out to the woods for cordwood & was passing the toll gate about 6:30, Wednesday morning when the toll keeper called after him & his comrade that John Hopkins came to the tollhouse about an hour before daylight that he had a letter for the toll keeper who then let him in Hopkins had a stick in his hand about 4 feet 6 inches long such as used woodrack rails & made a blow at him the tollkeeper, John Lawry. There was a fierce encounter till he succeeded in getting the stick & gave Hopkins blows to the head. Witness saw no blood on the floor. The toll keeper wanted to send word to the Watertown police.
    John Gilmour resided on the hill about 100 yards from the tollhouse. Half an hour after sunrise Lawry came up the hill & called there was a dead man there near the door. He went to the house where he was told the same story. Lawry looked wild & he was glad to get out of the house, he did not appear to be drunk. The tollhouse is quite a small room & the ceiling is very low. The deceased's cap & handkerchief were lying at his feet. Gilmour asked how the deceased fall. He finally said the fell on his back, but the witness could see from the head wounds he would fall on his side. He had struck him 5 or 6 times after he was down, knocked out 2 teeth & he was determined to rub out the marks.
    Lawry was a nice man, a very quiet neighbor, Never saw either of them worse of liquor. Witness has frequently seen the deceased this winter, but never saw the muffling on his feet before; had seen the shawl tied on his head, as if to keep off the cold. There was plenty of room in the shanty to stoke a blow with the stick, but not much blood on the floor inside, measuring about 3 or 4 inch broad. The previous day Hopkins was in witnesses house said he had broke his axe & said he to go to Hamilton to borrow one.
    Ann fully deposed she slept at her son-in-law Hopkins' house on Tuesday night. He was going to Hamilton to borrow one. Thinks Hopkins could be about Gilmour's when the 6 o'clock bell rang. Hopkins had worn rans on his feet sine the thaw. Dr. Ryall deposed the deceased's body had contusions on head, face, 2 on thumb, & extensive 5 fractures into the brain.
    John Flynn deposed the deceased told him David Smoke proved to lend him an axe & would leave the axe or word at the tollhouse.
    [No further followup found, but he did not do jail time as by the 1861 Census he is the toll keeper outside of Waterdown on what is now called Waterdown Road. Back in those days Snake Rd. was called the Waterdown Rd. or the road to Waterdown]
    Ref: Toronto Globe & Mail Newspaper.

    Note5: One can imagine the widow Rebecca Hamilton taking up residence in this toll house where the neighbors would no doubt remind her & her family of the infamous history of this toll house. Lock you doors!

    GANGES, Michigan
    . 1878 - Allegan is county seat, 3,000 inhabitants on the Kalamazoo river, 25 miles nw of Kalamazoo, 2 Grand Rapids railroads pass through Allegan. 3 flouring mills, 2 saw mills, 2 planning mills, 1 foundry & 1 woolen mill.
    It is an excellent farming twp. & near the lake the land is devoted chiefly to the cultivation of peaches. In the spring of 1880 the number of peach trees reached 84,000, of which 30,000 were 445 years old over. The fruit of Ganges is mainly sent on the Chicago W Michigan Railroad. It was of her son Alexander Hamilton who started these very fruit trees. - PJA
    Ref. Polk Michigan State Gazetteer.

    . 1887 Michigan Crop Report, Ganges. Large meteor seen through the fog on evening of May 23, first appearing in the east. 45 degrees above the horizon, moving north. Optical phenomena, Ganges 2 May: Solar halos were observed (i.e. weather - planning forecast); Hails 31st May. This phenomena would have been much discussed in the neighbourhood. - PJA.]

    . 1888 Jan 7, Benton Harbor. Mrs. John Teetzel died' Wednesday, aged 74 years.
    . 1888 Jan 5, Mrs John Teetzel whose death was noted our least issue, left 7 children. Funeral will occur on Friday afternoon.
    Mrs. Hamilton, of Peachville, Michigan, a sister of Mrs Teetzel, accompanied by her husband & son Alexander, arrived yesterday afternoon.
    Note6: 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 Belt' growing area of Michigan. - PJA

    . 1890 Michigan Death Registration:
    Registration #1600, died 17 Feb 1890, widow, aged 74y 11 months, Ganges Twp., Allegan Co., Michigan.
    [Born 17 Mar 1815, compared with her Monument date, equals born 4 May 1815. ] Cause of Death: Slow paralysis.
    Born Canada, parents Mary & Richard Lawrence.
    Note7: Rebecca Lawrence-Hamilton was living with daughter Mary Jane Wanner at the time of her death.

    Transcripts & reach by PJ Ahlberg, U.E., Thank you. - - -

    Birth:
    Born Lot 25, Con 1 Yonge St., Toronto. Until 1818 her father was living in York/Toronto, ON.

    Died:
    COD: Slow paralysis. Aged 74y 11m. = 17 Mar 1815. Widowed. Dau. of Mary & Richard Lawrence.

    Buried:
    Ganges. 74y 9m 13d. 'Mother', Tall grey monument with wheat sheaves. "Hamilton"

    Notes:

    Married:

    Children:
    1. Child Eight HAMILTON was born est 1834 in Nassagaweya Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died est 1850 in Nassagaweya Twp., Halton Co., Ontario.
    2. Richard Lawrence HAMILTON was born on 20 Apr 1836 in Toronto, York Co., Ontario; died on 4 Feb 1909 in Erin Village, Wellington Co., Ontario; was buried in Erin Union Cemetery.
    3. Alexander HAMILTON was born on 3 Oct 1837 in Halton County, Ontario; died on 11 Oct 1910 in Bangor, Arlington Twp., Van Buren Co., Michigan; was buried on 13 Oct 1910 in Arlington Hill Cemetery.
    4. Mary Jane HAMILTON, .1 was born on 10 Dec 1838 in Chinguacousy Twp., Peel Co., Ontario; died on 18 Feb 1930 in Bangor, Arlington Twp., Van Buren Co., Michigan; was buried in Taylor Cemetery.
    5. Hadassah HAMILTON was born on 6 May 1841 in Chinguacousy Twp., Peel Co., Ontario; died on 28 Mar 1911 in Big Rapids, Mecosta Co., Michigan; was buried in Highland View Cemetery.
    6. 2. Rev. James W HAMILTON, Jr., .3 was born on 17 Feb 1842 in Trafalgar Twp., Halton Co., Ontario; died on 22 Oct 1915 in Sulphur Springs, Hillsborough, Florida; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery.
    7. William JOHN HAMILTON, .1 was born in 1846 in Chinguacousy Twp., Peel Co., Ontario; died in May 1908.
    8. Rebecca ELIZABETH HAMILTON was born on 8 Oct 1854 in Chinguacousy Twp., Peel Co., Ontario; died on 8 Nov 1921 in Pavilion, Kalamazoo, Michigan; was buried on 15 Nov 1921 in Taylor Cemetery.

  3. 6.  Oliver HALL was born in 1807 in New Hampshire.

    Notes:

    . 1850 Oct 24 Census, North East Twp., Erie, Pennsylvania
    Oliver Hall, age 43, b. 1807, New Hampshire, Farmer;
    Emily Hall, age 47, b. 1803, New York;
    Alice Hall, age 7, b. 1843, Pennsylvania;
    Harvey Hall, age 4, b. 1846, Pennsylvania;
    Amos Hall, age 3, b. 1847, Pennsylvania;
    Sylvia Tuttle, age 15, b. 1835, Pennsylvania. - - -

    Oliver married Emily EASTMAN. Emily (daughter of Joseph EASTMAN and Hannah Martin WARNER) was born in 1803 in Oneida County, New York; died after 1870 in Niles, Berrien Co., Michigan. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Emily EASTMAN was born in 1803 in Oneida County, New York (daughter of Joseph EASTMAN and Hannah Martin WARNER); died after 1870 in Niles, Berrien Co., Michigan.

    Notes:

    Emily is the daughter of Hannah Martin Warner & Joseph Eastman, Jr.

    . Emily Eastman married first:
    Timothy Tuttle, b. 4 Jan 1804, Erie, Penn - aft 1920
    i. Joseph Socrates Tuttle, born about 1827, died after 1920.
    ii. Matilda Tuttle, born about 1829, North East, Erie, Pennsylvania, died in 1858 in North East, Erie, Pennsylvania, United States.
    iii. Angeline H. Tuttle was born in Sep 1831.
    iv. Elsie Ann Tuttle, born 17 Sep 1833 in North East, Erie, Pennsylvania - died on 12 Mar 1920, Niles, Berrien, Michigan, buried Silverbrook Cemetery, Niles, Berrien, Michigan, United States.
    Elsie married John Warren Hart- born about 1838 - died in 1920 Michigan
    v. Ursula Emeline Tuttle, born 22 Mar 1835 - died on 26 Oct 1901.

    . Emily Eastman married second
    Oliver Hall, born c. 1807, New Hampshire, died after 1880.

    Their 3 children:
    i. Alice J. Hall, born 15 Sep 1843- died 29 Nov 1923.
    vii. Harry Hall, born about 1846, Erie, Pennsylvania.
    viii. Amos T. Hall, born Aug 1848 North East Twp., Erie, Penn.

    . George Eastman,
    The inventor of the Kodak film processing & the first simple consumer camera is a grandson of a first cousin of Emily Eastman Tuttle Hall was inventor George Eastman 1854 -1932 by suicide at Rochester, NY. Buried Mount Hope Cemetery, Rochester, NY. - - -

    Children:
    1. 3. Alice Josephine HALL was born on 15 Sep 1843 in Erie, Erie Co., Pennsylvania; died on 29 Nov 1923 in Grand Rapids, Kent Co., Michigan; was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  James HAMILTON, .1 was born est 1779 in Strabane, Tyrone Co., Ireland; died est 1827± in Strabane, Tyrone Co., Ireland.

    Notes:

    James's son, James Hamilton, born c. 1801, was a flax weaver in Ireland. The family were also farming & surely must have grown flax also.

    Recorded for further research:

    . 1796 Irish Flax Growers
    Flax Growers List of 1796, known officially as the Spinning Wheel Premium Entitlement List, or more commonly the Flax Growers Bounty List.
    The Irish Linen Board published a list of nearly 60,000 individuals in 1796. Spinning wheels were awarded based on the number of acres planted. People who planted one acre were awarded 4 spinning wheels & those growing 5 acres were awarded a loom.

    Hamilton, James, Aghaloo, Tyrone
    Hamilton, James, Bodoney Upper Tyrone
    Hamilton, James, Camus,Tyrone
    Hamilton, James, Cappagh, Tyrone
    Hamilton, James, Desertcreat, Tyrone
    Hamilton, James, Donacavey, Tyrone
    Hamilton, James, Donaghedy, Tyrone
    Hamilton, James, Donacavey, Tyrone

    Hamilton, Audrey, Drumragh Parish, 1 spinning wheel
    Hamilton, John, Drumragh Parish, 4 spinning wheels
    Hamilton, Martha, Drumagh Parish, 1 spinning wheel
    A List of Persons to whom Premiums for sewing Flax-seed in the Year 1796 have been adjudged by the Trustees of the Linen Manufacture.

    . "Pursuant to the Scheme offered by them for encouraging the Growth of Flax throughout the Kingdom, viz. 'To the Person who should sow between the 10th Day of March & the 1st Day of June 1796, with a sufficient Quantity of good sound Flax-seed, any Quantity of Land, well prepared & fit for the purpose, not less than 1 Acre -4 Spinning Wheels, - 3 Roods 3 Ditto, -2 Roods-2 Ditto, 1 Rood-1 Ditto. And to the Person who should sow in like Manner any Quantity of like Land, not less than 5 Acres, a Loom, or Wheels, Reels, or Hatchells to the Value of 50 Shillings & for every 5 Acres over & above the first 5 a like Premium.'
    Every Person preferring Reels may have 2 of them in lieu of a Spinning Wheel.

    . Spinning Wheel Premium Entitlement List, Flax Growers Bounty List - 1796:
    In the 18th Century Ulster gained a worldwide reputation as a producer of fine linen, which is made from flax. From time to time, the Government introduced incentives to encourage more people to grow flax.

    In 1796 the Irish Linen Board published a list of people who had received bounties for planting flax. This was known officially as the Spinning Wheel Premium Entitlement List, but was generally called the Flax Growers Bounty List. Only the name & civil parish of the beneficiary was recorded & there is no further detail available.

    . Over 60,000 people in Ireland received incentives, of which over 40,000 were based in Ulster. Donegal & Tyrone had the highest number of recipients, reflecting the importance of flax in the local economy. People planting one acre of flax received 4 spinning wheels & those who planted 5 acres received a loom. Only the name, town & civil parish of the beneficiary was recorded & there is no further details available. The barony was listed instead of the parish in a few of the records. - - -

    Birth:
    Scotch descent.

    Died:
    Alt: 1778, Aged 93, b1778 Strabane. (Son James left for Canada 1824.)

    James married Mrs. Mary HAMILTON, .1. Mrs. was born est 1779± in Northern Ireland; died est 1827± in Strabane, Tyrone Co., Ireland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mrs. Mary HAMILTON, .1 was born est 1779± in Northern Ireland; died est 1827± in Strabane, Tyrone Co., Ireland.

    Notes:

    Birth:


    Died:
    (Son James left for Canada 1824.)

    Children:
    1. 4. James HAMILTON, Sr. was born on 23 Jun 1801 in Drumragh, Co. Tyrone, Ireland; died on 1853 - 1858 in Chinguacousy Twp., Peel Co., Ontario.

  3. 10.  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. 11.  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. 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. 5. 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

  5. 14.  Joseph EASTMAN was born on 21 Mar 1756 in New Fairfield, Connecticut.

    Notes:

    . Joseph Jr. is the son of Joseph Eastman Sr., born Sep 1724, Hanover, New Jersey &
    Phebe Hendricks, b. 1723, New Fairfield, CT. to 4 Mar 1812, Marshall, NY.
    8 Eastman children born in Marshall & Waterville, NY. T2 of his brothers were Rev. Hezekiah Eastman & Nathaniel Eastman. - - -

    Joseph married Hannah Martin WARNER. Hannah was born on 19 Jul 1767 in Woodbury, Litchfield Co., Connecticut; died on 17 Jul 1832 in Waterville, Oneida, Co., New York. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 15.  Hannah Martin WARNER was born on 19 Jul 1767 in Woodbury, Litchfield Co., Connecticut; died on 17 Jul 1832 in Waterville, Oneida, Co., New York.

    Notes:

    Hannah is the daughter of Mary Durkee & Nathan Warner.

    i. Mary Eastman, d. 17 Apr 1840, Earlville, Chenango, New York

    ii. Abigail Eastman, b. Abt 1786 - d. 16 Nov 1842 Gerry, Chautauqua, New York
    Buried Chrowe's Cemetery, Gerry, Chautauqua, New York
    Married, c. 1802-3 at Oneida, NY, to Simeon Williams.

    iii. Nathan Warner Eastman born Abt. 1790, Kingsbury, Washington, New York
    Died Aft 1860, Auburn, Fayette, Iowa
    Married Miss. Phebe.

    iv. Sallina Eastman, Born 24 Mar 1792, Oneida, New York - Died 6 Feb 1841, Fremont, Sandusky, Ohio, Buried kwood Cemetery, Fremon,
    Married1 Ammi Williams, Married 22 Mar 1810 New York
    Married2 on 25 Nov 1827, Ezra Williams, 25 Nov 1827, Fremont, Sandusky, Ohio, United States.

    v. Ruth Eastman, b. Oneida, New York. - - -

    Children:
    1. 7. Emily EASTMAN was born in 1803 in Oneida County, New York; died after 1870 in Niles, Berrien Co., Michigan.