Matches 12,301 to 12,350 of 26,054
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12301 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Mary Stillwell & Richard Applegate of Middletown. . Elizabeth Applegate wife of William Leonard, died April 12, 1836, aged 44 years, 4 days.h- - - | APPLEGATE, Elizabeth (I1995)
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12302 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Mercy & Abner Miles, who was a prominent merchant & tavern owner in early Toronto-Markham, Ontario. . 1802 Dec 22, were married after publication of Banns, John Arnold and Elizabeth Miles, by me George O'Kill Stuart. . Richmond Hill Presbyterian Cemetery. Sacred to the memory of Elizabeth wife of John Arnold Senr. who died April 16, 1858; Aged 74 years. The Lord knoweth all things & unto Thee Oh! God my spirit I commend. . Rev. Wm. Jenkins' first communion service at Miles' Hill was in keeping with the rough-and-ready gatherings he had been holding ever since he arrived in North America. His pulpit was a stump & the sanctuary was a clearing in a grove of pine trees on James Miles' property on the west side of Yonge Street, where the Presbyterian Church & its cemetery stand today. He spoke to a large congregation who must have been extremely dedicated, as they had "travelled distances of one to 10miles over rutted corduroy roads, on foot, on horseback & in wagons. . James Miles donated 5 acres (about 2 hectares) of his land on the west side of Yonge Street to the church. Parts of this plot not used for church building, manse, woodshed, driving shed, & stable were initially leased for crops & ultimately rented as lots for homes. Although Miles apparently intended the land to be a gift, he neglected to sign the deed over to the congregation, so the church ended up making a belated payment for the property after Miles' death in 1844. The land was purchased from Miles' niece, Elizabeth Arnold, & her husband, John, for £300, or about $300 an acre (about $750 a hectare). Ref: Early History of Richmond Hill, 1930. Ontario Land Registry Office Lot 9 & 10, Concession Broken Front, p13 & p16 (duplicated p 95). . 1796 Dec 15, Patent, Crown to Hon David W Smith .1798 Sep 4, Deed, D W Smith, to Abner Milles,All A, Lot 9 . 1843 Jan 4, Surrendered, Hannah Playter, John Vanderburg, John & Elizabeth Arnold, to The Queen, Lot 9 & other lands. - - | MILES, Elizabeth BETSEY (I574)
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12303 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Peter Hendrick Vanderburgh, born 23 Feb, 1755 - 1839, Poughkeepsie, Dutchess Co., NY & Nelly Dutcher (Neeltje Ellen Duytscher, Born 23 Feb, 1755 - 27 Oct 1829, Poughkeepsie, NY.) . 1810 February 24, Saturday, Married by License, by Rev. Geo. O'Kill Stuart, St. James Cathedral. William Wilson, of the Township of Markham, & Elizabeth Vanderburgh, of the aforesaid township. . Census 1852 Markham, Ontario William L Willson, Born Canada, C of England, Age 61/1791. 2 males. 2 females. Eliz'th, born US, 59 years /1792, 1.5 story frame house, John, b Canada, 25 years /1826, Hellen Willson, 17 years /1834. . Elizabeth Vanderburg's sister, Amelia, also related to the Willson through the Arnolds. . Helen Vanderburg married Stillwell Willson. * Peter Vanderburg, son of Richard Vanderburgher, lived at Lot 24, Con 2, that is adjacent to her & Wm. L Willson. Peter married Mary Ann Marsh. White cement monument with a weeping willowing tree, reads Elizabeth wife of Robert L Willson, who dies Feb10 1873, Aged 28 yrs, 1 month 28 days Gone but not forgotten. - - - | VANDERBURGH, Elizabeth (I28)
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12304 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Sarah & Peter Hilts. Census 1916 Battle River, Alberta Alfred Roy, age 72, Ontario, Elizabeth Roy, age 68, son George M Roy, age 46. - - - | HILTS, Elizabeth (I620)
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12305 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Sarah Catherine Duck and William Madget. | MADGETT, Elizabeth CHARLOTTE (I2017)
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12306 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Sarah Holman & William Myles. 1896 Oct 11 - Mr & Mrs. F D Cummer are expected home from Europe this week. Ref: Plain Dealer, Cleveland. - - - | MYLES, Elizabeth Ellen ELIZA (I609)
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12307 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Sarah James & Jonathan Ashbridge, both of Pennsylvania. | ASHBRIDGE, Elizabeth (I43)
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12308 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Sarah Judith Willson & Jehu John Mosher. | MOSHER, Elizabeth Ellen ELIZA (I1059)
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12309 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Sarah M Martin & Evi Adams. * 1900 Jan. Fourth Generation, Parent: Elizabeth Adams, born April 14th, 1809. Died Aug. 22, 1874. Aged 65 years 4 mos. 8 days. She was the oldest daughter of Evi Adams, a son of Judge Evi Adams & Sarah Martin, a daughter of Azariah Martin. She hand 3 brothers & 2 sisters [Cox]: First Child: Van Rensaler [Adams], who married Sarah Gould. They left no children, twins having died in infancy. 2nd child: John: born March 16, 1839. Died September 30, 1852, Aged 13y 6m 14d. 3rd child: Parkinson, who married Mary Ann Willson. They had 4 daughters. 4th child: POLLY OR My, who married William O Roe. They had one son &one daughter. 5th child: Sarah Jane who married nathaniel Martin. They had 1 daughter, who died young. - - - | ADAMS, Elizabeth (I625)
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12310 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Statira Edith Montgomery & Stillwell Willson the Younger. . Joseph & Elizabeth Shepard owned a large 200 acre parcel of land on the south side of today’s Shepard Avenue between Leslie Street & Don Mills Road from 1849 until 1872. . 1837 - After the Rebellion Elizabeth’s sons returned to Toronto. Michael Shepard House,101 Senlac Road at Burnett Ave., Lot 17, Concession 1WY. Built in 1859, the Michael Shepard House is constructed in the Georgian Survival style & assumes great significance in connection with the Shepard family that settled in the historic community of Lansing at the beginning of the 19th century. The House is also significant in association with Michael Shepard, who supported William Lyon Mackenzie's Radical Reform party & participated in the Rebellion of 1837. Architecturally, the massing of the house takes the form of a 2 story main block with a one-and-a-half story kitchen wing positioned at the west rear. Incorporating a generous sense of proportion & a pleasing symmetry, the three-ranked facade of the Michael Shepard House is generally considered to be less common among Georgian buildings in the region. The Michael Shepard House has been recommended by the North York Heritage Committee/Local Architectural Conservation Advisory Committee for designation under part IV of the Ontario Heritage Act (R.S.O. 1990) on architectural & historical grounds. Ref: Toronto Council & Committees, 1999 Jun 22. . 1885 Oct 6 - Died - Shepard, at Lansing* on Sunday morning, Elizabeth Willson, wife of Joseph Shepard, aged 59. Funeral to Mount Pleasant on Tuesday, 6th inst. at 2 pm. Ref: The Globe Newspaper, Toronto. Note: Lansing is located at Sheppard & Yonge Streets, North York, Toronto. - - - | WILLSON, Elizabeth N .5 (I437)
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12311 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Susan Estell & Samuel Willson. * 1900 Jan. - Second Generation Sixth child: Elizabeth, married Jacob Rorick. They lived & died on a farm near Franklin Furnace, and raised a large family sons & daughters, who mostly went West & settled in the state of Michigan, where they are a large influential family. . SUSSEX COUNTY MARRIAGES, New Jersey, 1801 September 30 - Peter DeWitt & Sarah Willson, and at the same time: . Jacob Rorick & Elisabeth Willson by Thomas Teasdale, Minister, Vernon, 1st Baptist Church of Wantage. Children of Elizabeth WILLSON& Samuel RORICK: . Levina Rorick Armstrong, Apr. 5, 1801, Sussex, NJ - Jan. 6, 1871 Pulteney, Steuben County, New York, USA; Spouse: Hugh Armstrong, 1795-1872, Bu. Glenview Cem. . Wm. Rorick, Mar. 30, 1805 Deckertown, NJ - Jan. 15, 1898. Morenci, Lenawee County, MI.; BU. Oak Grove, MI. Spouses: Phoebe Anne Breese 1811-1858 & Almira Wintermute, 1822-1888; . Suzanne Rorick Vail, Feb 14, 1808 Hardyston, NJ - 11 Mar 1895, Canadaigua, MI, Bu Oak Grove, MI; Spouses: Lewis Moore, d. 1853 & Moses Vail 1801-1888; . Estel Rorick Apr 1808 Deckerton, NJ - 14 Sep 1880, Lanaweee Co., MI, BU. Oak Grove, MI. . Lucy Ann Rorick Loman, 14 Feb 184, Sussex Co., NJ - 12 Sep 1881 Lenawee Co., NJ. BU. Oak Grove, MI. Spouse, John Loman 1805-1886. . Harriet Rorick Slater, 8 May 1816, Sussex Co., NJ - 29 May 1877, Medina. Lenawee Co., MI, BU. Oak Grove, MI., Spouse Sylvester Slater, 1817-1885. . Cosper Rorick, 11 Sep 1817 Deckertown - 28 Dec 1874, Seneca, Lanawee Co., NJ, Aged 57y, BU. Oak Grove Cemetery, MI., Spouse Nancy A Breese. - - - | WILLSON, Elizabeth (I665)
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12312 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Susannah Chapman & Samuel Haines. | HAINES, Elizabeth (I416)
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12313 | Elizabeth is the daughter of Susannah Pelletreau & Wm. Ustick. Her father, William Ustick, a hardware merchant who had earlier antagonized the New York Sons of Liberty by violating the colonial boycott of British manufactures. - - - | USTICK, Elizabeth (I2703)
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12314 | Elizabeth Marshall's first husband was Mr. Dart, their son Marshall Dart, born 1921 California. . 2nd husband is Daniel Lawrence, their daughter is Sandra C Lawrence. . 1940 Census Silveyville Judicial Township, Solano, California Elizabeth Lawrence, b. 1901 Pennsylvania Sandra C Lawrence, b 1897, California Marshall Dart, b 1921, California, Son. - - - | MARSHALL, Elizabeth Victoria (I575)
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12315 | Elizabeth Mulloy is the daughter of Wyntje Lavinia Snyder & Thomas Mulloy., the Elder. . 1822 Oct 9, York. UCLPetition 23, V Batch 13, C2948. To Gov. Pergine Maitland. Petition of of Elizabeth Vanderburgh, Markham Twp., is a daughter of Thomas Mulloy, of Albion Twp., late of Vaughan in the Home District. She is married to Peter Vanderbugh, the Younger, have never received any land & prays for a grant of 200 Acres as Daughter of a UE Loyalist. Signed, Elizabeth HER X MARK Vanderburgh. . Affidavit: York Court House, 8 Oct, 1822. Elizabeth Vanderburgh personally appeared at the General Quarter Sessions of the Peace & is Recognized by the Magistrates to be the daughter of Thomas Mulloy of Albion, late of Vaughan who retained his loyalty during the late War [1812]. And the said Peter Vanderburgh, The Younger, husband of Elizabeth, was too young to do duty in the Militia during the late War. Recommended 16 Oct 1822. XReference: See Petitions of her father, Thomas Mulloy. Ontario Land Registry Abstract Book, Caledon, Peel Co., p87 Lot 8 South West Half, Con 6 East Huron Street . 1826 Mar 14, Patent, Crown, to Elizabeth Vandeburgh, 100 Acres. . 1830 Mar 6, Bargain & Sale, Wm. Arnold, £150, All & other lands. . 1832 May 4, B&S John Arnold, to David Harigan, £30, all acres. - - - | MULLOY, Elizabeth (I1357)
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12316 | Elizabeth Perie is the daughter of Barbra Bower of Fortrose, Inverness & Archibald Perie, also of Morayshire, Scotland. (On 1 Feb 1861 Archibald Pirie married Jessie Hay to who on 16 Dec 1860 was born at Drainie an half-sister Ann Pirie.) Barbra Bower married David McKeedie [McKeddie], thus, step-father of Elizabeth Perie. . Ontario Marriage Registration # 9848, Wellington Co. on 7 Dec 1875 at Minister's House, Rothesay, ON., George Walker, born Erin, Ontario, 22 y /1853, bachelor, Residence: Minto Twp., Born Erin Twp., Ontario, Farmer, Ch. of England, Wellington, Son of Mary Darroch & George Michael Walker. married Elizabeth Perie, age 19y /1856, b. Lossiemouth, North Butain, Scotland, residence, Minto Twp., Presbyterian, Single, daughter of Archibald Perie & Barbara Bowers Witnesses: Alexander Willson & Mary Reid, both of Minto Twp. Married by Rev. Daniel Anderson. . 1925 Dec 7, 50 Wedding anniversary of George & Elizabeth Walker, nee McKiddie, Allenford. Note: Verify surname. - - - | MCKIDDIE, Elizabeth Perie (I285)
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12317 | Elizabeth Salter married .1) Thomas Ustick b. ca. 1734, d. before 1764; .2) 22 NOV 1764 Ezek Hartshorne, (s/o William Hartshorne and Elizabeth Lawrence) b. 09 DEC 1728 Middletown, Monmouth Co., NJ, d. 14 FEB 1795 Five children born 1765-1778: Richard Jr., William, Ezekiel, Elizabeth, Hannah Hartshorne. | SALTAR, Elisabeth (I1125)
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12318 | Elizabeth Scudder is the daughter of Mary King, b 1623, Dorestshire, England & John Scudder, b 1619, Kent, England. Mary & John Scudder were married 1641 in Newtown, New York. VERIFY date: . 1693, in the shape of ante-nuptial gift from William Lawrence to his prospective wife, wherein he deeds her a "house & land, at Middletown, New Jersey, in consideration of my love and affection for her as I intend marriage with her." Ref: Newtown Township Records, NJ. . Elizabeth Scudder was the widow of John Alburtis of Long Island, NY. . Elizabeth Scudder's second husband is sometimes given as Capt. William Lawrence. . Elizabeth Scudder & John Alburtis children: 1. John Alberti, b: 1668 in Hempstead, Naussau, NY, 2. Elizabeth Alberti, b: 1669 in Newton, Naussau, NY 3. Samuel Alberti, b: 1670 in Hempstead, Queens, New York, 4. Mehetable Alberti, born: 1675 in Newton, Nassau, New York, 5. Judith Alberti, b: 1676 in Nassau, Queens, New York, 6. Deliverance Alberti, born 1677 in Hempstead, Queens, New York. - - - | SCUDDER, Elizabeth (I1094)
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12319 | Elizabeth Smith married 1. Wm. Lawrence.1 2. Philip de Carteret, 1st colonial governor of N.J., & 3. Richard Townley of N.J. . Sir George Carteret was a favourite courtier of James.II, he being very gallant & loyal, & had defended the Isle of Jersey against the Long Parliament. 1681 April - Gov. Andros declared himself (Dutch) governor of New Jersey & escorted Carteret back to Elizabethown, warning him not to govern. Instead of fighting for his office, Townley began building a new brick home for a rich widow, Elizabeth Smith Lawrence of Long Island, mother of 7 children, as his bride. Before the wedding, he signed probably the 1st prenuptial agreement in NY promising that her Estate would go to her sons. They married in Apr 1681. Gov. Andros left for England & Philip resumed his governorship. He died of his injuries a year later, at only 43 years. Gov. Carteret died a year later of his injuries encountered when the Dutch Gov. of New York, Gov. Andros had Carteret pull from his bed, beat & hauled off to NY. . .1682 WILL of Philip Carteret: I bequeth unto my most dear & beloving wife, Elizabeth Cartert, all my housed, buildings, in American. Unto my mother, Widow Rachel Carteret, if she be yet living, all that my manner house, edifice & buildings, with all my lands, tenements & hereditaments with the Island of Jersey, England.... then to be divided amongst my brothers & sisters. ... There shall be yearly forever paid out of my Estate in the island of Jersey, two quarters of wheat to the poor in the parish of St. Peters. Signed, Ph. Carteret, 10 Dec. 1682. DNA testing links 300-year-old remains of a baby to a Colonial Md. Governor: 2016 Oct 16 - The surviving pieces of the baby's skull are paper thin in places. There are holes in the cranium. The infant has the classic "rosary bead" rib deformities of the ancient childhood disease rickets. Some of the bones with the tiny skeleton on the Smithsonian lab table also show evidence of anemia. The infant probably had scurvy, from a lack of vitamin C. Much is known about the 6-month-old who died in Maryland 300 years ago & was buried in a small lead-covered coffin. Yet there is no record of the child's death or birth. No one knew for certain who the infant was. No one knew if the baby was a boy or girl. Now, almost 26 years after the coffin was unearthed in St. Mary's County, experts at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History have learned that the baby was a boy & the offspring of an important colonial governor of Maryland, Philip Calvert. The development is the latest in the long-running archaeological project at St. Mary's City - once the capital of Maryland & now a community of the dead where scientists have been digging on & off since the 1930s. The discovery came about through new genetic testing done at Harvard Medical School at the request of the Smithsonian. The baby, whose full name still is not known, is one of hundreds of early Marylanders buried in a large field where the old city once stood, according to the Smithsonian & the Historic St. Mary's City project. The Maryland colony was established at St. Mary's in 1634, & the field was its cemetery almost from the beginning, said Silas Hurry, the project's curator of collections. In this case, DNA from an ear bone of the baby was matched to DNA from a shin bone of Calvert, a political, legal & diplomatic figure in early Maryland. His remains & those of his first wife, Anne, also in lead-covered coffins, were exhumed amid great fanfare, along with the baby's, in the early 1990s from the site of a long-vanished Jesuit chapel. DNA from the bones of Philip Calvert & the baby, but not from Anne. She was probably not the baby's mother anyhow: Indications were that she had died before the infant was born. Reich said in a telephone interview that, after testing, he was able to tell the male adult & the child have a father-son relationship. The Calverts were Colonial elite. Philip Calvert owned 3,900 acres of land. In the late 1670s, he built a spectacular house in St. Mary's named St. Peters, Miller said. The house had a wine cellar as well as a large library with books on astronomy, medicine & law. Now gone, the house "was the size of the Governor's Palace at Williamsburg," Miller said. "At the time, it was the largest private home in Colonial America." The Calverts were buried in expensive wooden coffins encased in sheets of lead that were shipped from England in the late 1670s. The man, in his 50s, was badly decomposed. He turned out to be Philip Calvert. The remains of the baby showed that it had been very sick. "I wasn't sure if it was a little boy or a little girl, & suspected it was a little girl," Owsley said in a recent interview. He wondered whether it was Philip Calvert's child, but wasn't certain. Anne's bones were well preserved, along with sprigs of the memorial herb rosemary, bits of a silk ribbon that may have been used to bind her wrists for burial & much of her hair. She was in her 60s. An examination showed that her right thigh bone had been badly broken at some point in her life. The gruesome break had not healed properly & had become infected, leaving a hole in the bone & shortening her right leg by 3 inches. In addition, she had lost all but 8 of her teeth, in part from scrubbing them with the 17th century's version of toothpaste: a mix of vinegar & tobacco ash. "The ash ... is going to wear away the enamel," Owsley said. "The vinegar is an acid, so it's destroying the tooth surface." After Anne died in 1678 or 1679, Philip Calvert married a young local woman named Jane Sewell. He thinks that the infant may have been their son. Evidence suggests that the baby was probably born around November 1682, he said. 2 months later, in January 1683, Calvert died, leaving Jane with a big house …& a sick child. After the baby's birth, swaddling had probably blocked the infant's exposure to sunlight, which led to a vitamin D deficiency & rickets, Owsley said. Scurvy, from the vitamin C deficiency, often went along with rickets. The anemia probably came from intentional bloodletting, which was done by physicians of that time to treat disorders. The baby died about 3 months after his father, in the spring of 1683, judging by the pine & oak pollen in the coffin. A year or so later, Sewell, having lost her husband & perhaps her baby son, left Maryland & moved to England with relatives, bidding farewell to the 3 graves in the small brick chapel. She never returned & never remarried, said Kari Bruwelheide, a Smithsonian anthropologist who worked on the project. In 1695, the Maryland capital was moved to Annapolis. St. Mary's City was abandoned. The wooden buildings crumbled. The settlement became a ghost town in the Colonial wilderness. The occupants, for the time being, will remain at the Smithsonian, where the experts hope to learn even more about the lives they led so long ago. Ref: Washington Post Newspaper. Research & transcriptions by PJ Ahlberg. Thank you. - - - | CARTERET, Govenor Philip (I114)
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12320 | Elizabeth Sterling married 18 Mar 1868, Pickering Twp. to James Mackie, b 1847, Pickering Twp., Ontario. | STERLING, Elizabeth (I1603)
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12321 | Elizabeth Tilley description Born: 1607, Henlow Died: 1686, Swansea She was 13 when she traveled on the Mayflower. Aged about 17 she married fellow Mayflower passenger John Howland in 1624 - 25. He had come as a man servant/apprentice to John Carver. They had 10 children who were born between 1625 and 1649. All lived and married. As a result she has a large number of descendants. She died in 1686 in Swansea. Her husband had died in 1672. | TILLEY HOWLAND, Elizabeth Separatist 10 (P1150)
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12322 | Elizabeth was the fourth daughter of Mary Crawford & William Poole. The first general store was opened on Lot 6, Concession 3 in 1835 by Alexander Totten. In the years that followed, Alexander Totten's store became a center point for the community that grew around it. When the first post office opened in 1858, it was suggested at a local meeting by Nicholas Eagan that the village be named Tottenham in honour of Alexander Totten for his contributions to the community. He also noted that Tottenham was a community in England. Tottenham is 40 Kilometers NW of Toronto. . Poole Family, compiled by Mrs. T J Hutchinson, March 1986: [Mary Crawford] Mrs. Poole of Lot 9, Con 8, Garafraxa Twp., 7th line, died about 1869. "While attempting to head off a flock of sheep, she fell breaking her left leg between the knee & the ankle. A week later the leg was fractured again through movement in bed. Mortification set in & eventually death. The deceased was the mother of 19 children, not one of whom survived her. Ref: Reported in Fergus newspaper, Belwood heading. Note: No date on clipping, but with that age group. (?) It is not known if the 2 Poole girls who married Monkmen & settled in the Carmel-Bellwood area were her daughters, but from the following frescoers, they dies at an early age. . ELIZABETH POOLE: 1831-1855, died at age 24 years & was buried in Carmel Cemetery. In 1849 she married Lawrence Moneyman 1829 - & in 1851 they moved from Tecumseh Twp., from the Tottenham-Newmarket area, to Garafraxa Twp., along with John Monkman & their father William Monkman 1793-1878. They settled on W half Lot 15, Con 7, 6th Line of Gara. Elizabeth was the 4th daughter of William & Mary Crawford Poole. Later Lawrence Monkman married a neighbor girl, Martha Ann Felker. Ref: Grandmother Blyth; Mrs. John Dobbin's Scrap Book & the Monkman Family History, & History of Tecumseh Twp. - - - | POOLE, Elizabeth (I318)
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12323 | Elizabeth was the second daughter of Leonard Sovereign. | SOVEREIGN, Elizabeth (I586)
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12324 | Elizabeth was the younger sister of Margaret, Henry Fern's first wife. They were married in Manchester Holy Trinity Church at Hulme. According to Alan Eatock's account, the 1871 census states that Elizabeth lived with her brother-in-law Henry Fern and his family at 28 Robert St., Ardwick, Manchester. She was about 20 years old at the time and her sister Margaret had died about 4 years earlier. Henry had seven children at the time of the 1871 census, the eldest being 17 or 18. Alan Eatock states, "He was, however, incorrectly listed in the 1871 census as married. (Henry did not marry Elizabeth Pybus until 1876.)" Alan Eatock's account shows two of the three children born to Elizabeth and Henry Fern arrived before the marriage in 1876. | Family (F156)
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12325 | Elizabeth Willson.IIIs is the daughter of Mary Ann Cummer & John Willson.3rd. White monuments, recumbent, cracked & [unless I am mistaken, from the picture the monument appears to be bolted to the ground! - PJ Ahlberg] & reads: IN MEMORY OF ELIZABETH WILSON DAUGHTER OF JOHN & MARY WILLSON, DIED MARCH 18TH 1813 AGED 4 YEARS & 10 MONTHS. - - - | WILLSON, Elizabeth .3 (I250)
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12326 | Elizabeth Winslow description Born: Circa 1595 East Bergholt/Chattisham, Died: 1621, Plymouth Wife of Edward Winslow. Recent research by Sue Allan and Caleb Johnson suggest she was probably born around 1595 in either East Bergholt or Chattisham and was unbaptized as a baby. While living in East Bergholt her parents, Samuel and Sarah Barker, were known as habitual “Brownists”, as was her step-mother, Elizabeth Barker senior, when she lived later at Chattisham. Elizabeth married Edward Winslow in Leiden, Holland, in May 1618. In the marriage bans, she is called a “jongedochter van Chatsum in Engelant,” i.e. a single woman from “Chatsum” in England. She was accompanied by her acquaintance Mary Allerton (wife of Isaac Allerton). In 1619, while suffering a serious illness in Leiden, Elizabeth wrote her will (but later recovered). In it she names Isaac Allerton as “her acquaintance”. On 4 July 1620, before the couple then joined the Mayflower, Elizabeth and her husband, Edward Winslow, appeared before the manor court at Chattisham to dispose of lands there that Elizabeth had inherited. The couple had no known children and on 24 March 1621, Elizabeth died - the very last death attributed to the first winter at Plymouth Colony. | BARKER, Elizabeth saints (P3553)
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12327 | Elizabeth's maiden name was not Chileab. Chileab is a Biblical name like the other children's names. | SMITH SMITH, Elizabeth 11 (P9700)
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12328 | Elizabeth's surname is sometimes spelled "Wedgewood." | WEDGWOOD, Elizabeth (I453)
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12329 | Elizabeth, b. Jan. 24, 1660. | WARD (3) LYON, Elizabeth FAG (P14396)
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12330 | Elizabeth, NJ | GRIFFIN, Lieut. William Preston Jr. (I607)
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12331 | Elizabeth, NJ, First Capital of New Jersey | Source (S93)
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12332 | Ella Anne Jane is the daughter of Eliza Ann Sayre & Jacob Willson. . 1877 Sep 13 - Marriage Scott-Willson, In Seaforth at the residence of O C Willson, brother of the bride, by Rev T Goldsmith, Mr. James Scott of Seaforth, to Miss Ellen Ann Jane, youngest daughter of Jacob Willson, Esq. of Colborne. Ref: Huron Expositor newspaper, pub. 1877.9.14. - - - | WILLSON, ELLA Ann Jane .i (I264)
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12333 | Ella E is the daughter of Hannah Kenninston & Wm. Hamilton. (Recorded for reference: This Ella E Hamilton is different person than the wife of Richard Hamilton of Erin, ON.) Verify identity: . James Amos Justice, born Erin, Ontario March 4, 1896, Age 19y 4m, Height 5 ft 9 ins., Dark complexion, Hazel eyes, Brown hair, Presbyterian. fit. 1915 Jul 17, Shorncliffe. Next of Kin, Brother Wm. Justice, Dauphin, Manitoba. Ref: WWI Attestation Papers. | HAMILTON, Ella E (I159)
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12334 | Ella is the daughter of Annie Duckworth & Benjamin Smeltzer. Recorded for reference & interest: . 1871 Wellington County Directory, West Garafraxa Smeltzer, John, Con 3, Lot 32, Freeholder. Smeltzer, John Con 5, Lot 15, Freeholder. - - - | SMELTZER, Forella Florence ELLA (I343)
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12335 | Ella is the daughter of Jane Matilda McCutcheon & Richard Lawrence Hamilton. . 1874 Pupils enrolled by John Ross Principal of Acton Public School: Daniel McK Johnston, 9 & John Thomas Johnston, sons of "Dr". Richard Johnston. Eratus D Johnston, 11, son of Richard Johnston. Richard Johnston, 5, son of Dr. Richard Johnston. Mary Ellen Hamilton, 10, daughter of Richard Hamilton. The revelation of their respective ages when registered back there in the old school, 57 years ago, caused quite a furore among some of the grandmothers & others of today. Ref: Acton Free Press newspaper, republished 1931.7.2. . 1876 Dec 7 - Acton Public School, results of a written examination in grammar: third Class, Ellen Hamilton 92%. Ref: Acton Free Press. Ontario Land Registry Abstract Book 237, p 67 Village of Erin, Lot 15, Con 10 . 1878 mar 1, B&S, Jas. White & wife, sold to Charles H Walker, All Quarter acres, . 1918 Mar 26, B&S, Ella H Walker, Widow, sold to Mary J McMillan, $1800. . Births, Ella Walker, born July 20th, 1884. . Marriage, Chas H Walker & Ella Hamilton married aunt 15h 1881 at the residence of her father R haflton, Acton, Ontario. Witnesses John Corwoclk & Samual Mclane. Ref: Bible of Jane Matilda McCutcheon Hamilton. . Ontario Marriage Registration # 003874, Halton Co., Acton Charles H Walker, 24 Y, born Erin, ON., Bachelor, Manuf. of farming equip., s/o John S. Walker & Elizabeth Walker X Ella Hamilton, 18y, Born Twp. Esquesing, Single, d/o Jane Hamilton & Richard Hamilton. Wit. John Cormick, Erin & S. McLean, Acton. On 15th June, 1881, Acton. Bridegroom is English Church, Bride's Rel. None. Rev A. Anderson, Wit: John Cornick, Erin & S M Law, Acton. License. . The Altar - Walker - Hamilton - In Acton, on the 15th inst., at the residence of the bride's father, by Elder A. Anders on of Hamilton, Mr. C. H. Walker of Erin Village to Miss Ella, the only daughter of Mr. Richard Hamilton of this village. Ref1: ACTON FREE PRESS, Thursday, June 16, 1881 & in the Erin Advocate " Ref2: ERIN ADVOCATE, Published every Wednesday. Note1: A similar copy was written in Bible of Jane Matilda McCutcheon Hamilton's Bible & in turn, given to her eldest granddaughter, Jennie Walker's bible, [then given to her daughter Marie Felker, to gave it to niece Patricia J Felker.] . 1881 Jun 23 - Mr. C. H. Walker & his newly made bride (Miss Ella Hamilton, of this village) returned from their wedding trip on Friday evening, after visiting friends in Toronto & Collingwood. They left for their new home in Erin Village on Saturday. Ref: Acton Free Press, page 3, column 2. . 1881 Nov 10 - Mr & Mrs. C. H. Waker, of Erin, were in town on Sunday. Ref: Acton Free Press, p3. . 1883 WELLINGTON COUNTY DIRECTORY: The Erin Disciples church is a brick building, seating 300. It was erected in 1873, at the cost of $4,200. Services at 11 a.m.; Sunday school at 10 a.m. There are 75 members. The pastorate is vacant. . Mr. C. H. Walker & his newly made bride, (Miss Ella Hamilton, of this village) returned from their wedding trip on Friday evening, after visiting friends in Toronto & Collingwood. They left for their new home in Erin Village on Saturday. . 1897 Jan 14 - Erin, A grand musical entertainment was given by the ladies of the Disciple Church, in the Temperance Hill last evening. The programme consisted of vocal & instrumental music, solos & recitations. . 1902 May 22. Obituary: Mrs. James Brown, Ruth Ann Hall, eldest daughter of Asa Hall, Esq. Born 1841 in Acton. Her husband lived 14 years. on Lot 1, Con 4, Erin, where he operated a saw mill. Friends form a distance were in attendance: Mr. Richard Hamilton (her father) & Mrs. C W. Walker, Erin. Ref: Acton Free Press. . 1911 Census Erin, Ontario, Ella Walker, b 1863. Ella sold up the foundry & house & moved with her girls to Toronto. ERIN ADVOCATE Weekly Newspaper: . 1909 Aug 18, Erin, Mrs S McCutcheon, Guelph, is the guest of Mrs Walker. . 1909 Aug 25, 1909, Mrs. Chas. W Walker, of West Toronto, who has been spending a 2 weeks vacation with friends & relatives here, returned home on Saturday evening, sorry to leave, but looking forward to a return visit next year. Note2: Chas. Walker died in June 1908. Ella sold up the foundry & moved with her girls to Toronto in 1922 to nurse her dying daughter Kate Walker.] . 1909 Sep 8, Erin. Mr. J Walker, Toronto, left for the North West, last week, after visiting his mother her. 1909 Oct 20, Erin Market Oct 20. Turkeys, dress, per pound $0.14 to 15 Potatoes per bag, $0.35 to 40. . 1911 Jan. 4 - Mr. Frank Walker, Union Bank, Smith's Falls, at home. Mr. & Mrs. J. Felker, of Toronto, spent New Years with his mother, Mrs. C H Walker. May 24, 1911 - Mrs. J. Felker, Toronto; & Mrs. T. Justice & daughter, of Dauphin, Manitoba, are here on a visit to their mother, Mrs. C. Walker . 1911 May 31- Mrs. J. Felker, Mr. John Walker, who has been visiting his mother here, for sometime returned to Winnipeg on Tuesday last. who has been here on a visit to her mother, Mrs. C. Walker, returned to her home in Toronto last week, accompanied by her sister Ruby. . 1911July 12 - Mrs. J. Felker, Toronto, is here on a visit to her mother, Mrs. C. Walker. . 1911 Oct. 18- Erin Fair Visitors: Mr & Mrs. J. Felker, Toronto, at Mrs. C. Walker's, 6,000 people attended the Fair last Friday. . 1911 Dec. 27- Mr. & Mrs. J. Felker, of Toronto; Mr. Frank Walker, of Smiths Falls; Miss I. Walker, with their mother, Mrs. Walker. . 1929 May 23 Mrs James Firstbrook, Dr Arthur Firstbrook, Mrs Ells Walker; daughter Irene & Master Edward Brock of Toronto, were guests of Mrs A E Nicklin on Saturday. . 1930 Aug 7. Mr Mrs Thos. Justice of Winnipeg, Manitoba, are visiting with Mrs Ella Walker & other relatives. [for funeral of son Frank W Walker.] . 1930 Oct 9, Thurs. Misses Irene, Ruby & Kathleen Walker Toronto, spend the week wend with their mother, Mrs Ella Walker. . 1931 Jun 18, Mrs Ella Walker, Mr Mrs P Finn motored & are visiting with Mr Mrs John Walker, at Regina, Sask. . 1931 Jun 25, Erin, Mrs Ella Walker & Mr Mrs Finn of Toronto, returned home on Sunday after spending 3 weeks at Winnipeg & Calgary. . 1931 Jul 9, Erin, Mr Mrs John Walker & daughter & son of Regina, Sask, are visiting with the former's mother, Mrs Ella Walker. . 1931 Jul 23. Miss Marie Felker, of Toronto, is holidaying with her grand-mother, Mrs Ella Walker. . 1932 Jan 7- Erin - Mrs. J. Felker an family, & Misses Irene & Ruby Walker of Toronto, Mr. Hughes of Regina Sask. [ should be son Babe Walker of Regina, Sask?], spent Christmas with their mother, Mrs. Ella Walker. . 1932 Apr Misses Ruby & Kathleen Walker, of Toronto, spent Ester with their mother, Mrs Ella Walker. . 1932 Jul 14 Thrus. Master Walker Justice, of Winnipeg, Man, is visiting with his grandmother, Mrs. Ella Walker. Ref: Acton Free Press, Ontario. . 1934 Aug 23, Miss Ruby Walker& Mrs N Felker of Toronto, are holidaying with Mrs Ella Walker. . 1934 Nov 22, Everton, Ontario. Mrs T D McCutcheon is staying with her aunt, Mrs Ella Walker, Acton. [Error: like Mrs TDM of Everton, is staying with Aunt Ella Walker, of Erin. Ref: Acton Free Press. . 1935 Feb 28, Thrus., Mr Mrs P Finn, Misses Irene & Ruby Walker, of Toronto, spent Sunday with Mrs Ella Walker. . 1935 Mar 14 & Erin. Mr Mrs P Finn, of Toronto, were Sunday visitors with Mrs Ella Walker. . 1935 Apr 11, Erin, Mr Mrs P Finn, & Ruby Walker, of Toronto, were Sunday visitors with Mrs Ella Walker. . 1935 Jul 18, Erin, Mrs Mrs P Finn, Mrs J Felker & 2 sons & daughter Marie, Misses Irene & Kathleen Walker of Toronto, were week-end visitors with Mrs Ella Walker . 1935 Mrs Thomas Justice, of Winnipeg, Man., is visiting with her mother, Mrs Ella Walker & other relatives. . 1935 Nov 14, Mrs Ella Walker & grandson, Edward Brock, were away in Toronto from Friday evening to Monday evening with her daughters. .1935 Dec 26, Mrs Ella Waker, Miss Kathleen Walker, & Edward Brock are away in Toronto for visits with relatives & friends during the Christmas holidays . 1936 Apr 9, Mr Mrs Neil Felker of Toronto, were Sunday visitors with Mrs Ells Walker; while in town Mr. Felker called on several old friends. - . - . 1936 Oct 22,Mrs Thos. Justice of Winnipeg man< Mrs Mrs P Finn, Mis Irene Walker, Mrs Jennie Felker, Miss Ruby Walker & Miss Kathleen Walker of Toronto, visited with Mrs Ells Walker. . 1938 Jun 30 - Ospringe - McCUTCHEON REUNION, held Saturday afternoon at the home of Mr Mrs Robert S McCutcheon, THIRD LINE, Erin, home offers McCutcheon settlers for 3 generations. The first McCutcheon came from Ireland over a 100 years go & purchased the home from the Crown. Inspire of unfavorable weather in early afternoon, 110 guest registered. Games & races: Races under 13: Helen Aitken & CHARLIE FELKER [born 1924] After the races, supper was served on the lawn, President Robt. McC. called the guests to order & extended to all a hearty welcome. MRS ELLA WALKER, gave a short history of the McCutcheon clan, which was very interesting. Ref: Acton Free Press. 1942 My 14, Erin Mrs Ella Walker has retuned to her home here after spending the the winter with her daughters in Toronto Her daughters , Mrs Thosmas Justice of Winnipeg, Manitoba, accompanied her & will remain for a time. Ref: Acton Free Press, reprinted from the Advocate. . 1935 Wellington Co., voters list: Mrs. Chas. widow, Erin. . ELLA HAMILTON'S FAMILY BIBLE: 12 X 9 X 4.5 inches thick. This Bible does not bear a publication date as such, but does have a publisher's note that it was entered into US Librarian of congress in 1876.The first entry for Richard & Jane's marriage was, thus entered at least 2 to 3 decades later. The Bible was then given to her eldest daughter, Jennie Walker, who in turned left it her eldest & only daughter, Marie Felker. The Bible then came to Marie's niece, myself, Patricia Felker Ahlberg, 2010, Toronto > Here I would like to make interesting notation: Between the pages of Luke XXI - XXII, there are several dark blue ink spots. Additionally, caught up in the binding was a broken & spent wooden match head. Grandmother Ella was well noted for smoking a pipe! So which came first the flying match head or spilt ink? PJA 2015 . First Family Record is a richly coloured Certificate of Holy Matrimony, Richard Hamilton of Acton & Jane M. McCutcheon of Erin Township on Thursday, Jany 24th, 1861 at Hugh McCutcheons by Revd. Joseph Unsworth, Congregational Minister, Georgetown. Witness: Stewart McCutcheon, Witness: Alex. Hamilton. . HAMILTON, ESTATE FILE, WELLINGTON, #8251, RG 2, 1917 Nov. 17 Petition of Ella Hamilton Walker: city of West Toronto, York Co., Widow Jane M. Hamilton of the village of Erin, Wellington Co. left $1,000 in Real Estate Signed, Ella M Walker Will dated 1 November 1910, Died "I devise & bequeath the sum to my daughter Ella Walker & for her & assign excepting the sum of $400 which I bequeath to my grand-daughter Jennie Felker - Residue to my said daughter." Executrix is my daughter Ella Walker. Signed, Jane M. Hamilton Witnesses: Janette McDowell, Erin, William McDowell Arch H. MacDonald Solicitor. Real Estate Description: 1/1 7 of an acre, being part of Easterly half of Lot #14, 9th concession of Erin, described by metes & Bounds in a Conveyance dated 1 May, 1891, from Charles Staples, of Golden, Colorado, & his wife to the said Jane Matilida Hamilton. . DISCIPLES OF CHRIST. Briefly then, the Esquesing church grew peacefully into the principles of the Campbellian reformation, & in June, 184 3, the first June meeting of the Ontario Disciples, was held. On that occasion the name "Disciples of Christ" or "Christians" was used. The site of this meeting house was near Norval, actually on the Menzies farm, Lot 8, 10th line, Esquesing. So small was the log building, that at the first June meeting, Ash records that numbers of the listeners had to vacate their seats in order to permit others to hear. This Esquesing church was characterized by very strict discipline as to its members' conduct. For, with this strong desire to maintain the purity of the witness to the gospel, there was evident the air of exaltation & discovery which are elements in any youthful cause. There was not much experience to fall back upon, & the Bible was truly an honored medium of counsel toward maintaining a high standard of conduct with which to exalt the Christian profession; & who ca n deny the wholesomeness of such an aim? Consider the delicacy of the recording scribe who could indite upon his record s about a sister that had erred & been removed from fellowship- "for a crime mentioned in I Corinthians." ...This forest sanctuary to Christ which Esquesing folk raised, has long since passed from common knowledge, but the spiritual emanations from that Bible-loving people still grasp at the stars. > Please see the McCutchons on the separate McCutcheon Family of Erin, Wellington Co., Ontario. at Rootsweb.com . Transcriptions by PJ Ahlberg. Thank you. - - - | HAMILTON, Mary Ellen ELLA (I8)
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12336 | Ella is the daughter of Jane Matilda McCutcheon & Richard Lawrence Hamilton. . 1876 Dec 7 - Acton Public School, results of a written examination in grammar: third Class, Ellen Hamilton 92%. Ref: Acton Free Press. . Ontario Marriage Registration # 3874, Acton, Halton Co., Ontario Charles H Walker, Age 24/ b.1857, Resided Twp. of Erin, Born Erin, Manufacture, Son of Elizabeth Walker & John S Walker, married Ella Hamilton, Age 18 / 1863 in Twp. of Esquesing, Born Esquesing, Daughter of Jame Hamilton an Richard Hamilton. Wit: John Corraick, Erin & S M Law, Acton. Married at Acton, 15 Jun 1881. License. . The Altar - Walker - Hamilton - In Acton, on the 15th inst., at the residence of the bride's father, by Elder A. Anderson of Hamilton, Mr. C. H. Walker of Erin Village to Miss Ella, the only daughter of Mr. Richard Hamilton of this village. Ref1: ACTON FREE PRESS, Thursday, June 16, 1881 & in the Erin Advocate " Ref2: ERIN ADVOCATE, Published every Wednesday. NOTE1: A similar copy was written in Ella Hamilton's Bible & given to her eldest granddaughter, Jennie Walker's bible. . 1881 Jun 23 - Mr. C. H. Walker & his newly made bride (Miss Ella Hamilton, of this village) returned from their wedding trip on Friday evening, after visiting friends in Toronto & Collingwood. They left for their new home in Erin Village on Saturday. Ref: Acton Free Press, page 3, column 2. . 1883 WELLINGTON COUNTY DIRECTORY: The Erin Disciples church is a brick building, seating 300. It was erected in 1873, at the cost of $4,200. Services at 11 a.m.; Sunday school at 10 a.m. There are 75 members. The pastorate is vacant. . Mr. C. H. Walker & his newly made bride, (Miss Ella Hamilton, of this village) returned from their wedding trip on Friday evening, after visiting friends in Toronto & Collingwood. They left for their new home in Erin Village on Saturday. . 1897 Jan 14 - Erin, A grand musical entertainment was given by the ladies of the Disciple Church, in the Temperance Hill last evening. The programme consisted of vocal & instrumental music, solos & recitations. . 1902 May 22. Obituary: Mrs. James Brown, Ruth Ann Hall, eldest daughter of Asa Hall, Esq. Born 1841 in Acton. Her husband lived 14 years. on Lot 1, Con 4, Erin, where he operated a saw mill. Friends form a distance were in attendance: Mr. Richard Hamilton (her father) & Mrs. C W. Walker, Erin. Ref: Acton Free Press. . 1911 Census Erin, Ontario, Ella Walker, b 1863. Ella sold up the foundry & house & moved with her girls to Toronto. ERIN ADVOCATE Weekly Newspaper, Ontario: . 1909 Aug 25 Wed.- Mrs. Chas. W Walker, of West Toronto, who has been spending a 2 weeks vacation with friends & relatives here, returned home on Saturday evening, sorry to leave, but looking forward to a return visit next year. [Chas. Walker died in June 1908. Ella sold up the foundry & moved with her girls to Toronto in 1922 to nurse her dying daughter Kate Walker.] . 1911 Jan. 4 - Mr. Frank Walker, Union Bank, Smith's Falls, at home. Mr. & Mrs. J. Felker, of Toronto, spent New Years with his mother, Mrs. C H Walker. May 24, 1911 - Mrs. J. Felker, Toronto; & Mrs. T. Justice & daughter, of Dauphin, Manitoba, are here on a visit to their mother, Mrs. C. Walker . 1911 May 31- Mrs. J. Felker, Mr. John Walker, who has been visiting his mother here, for sometime returned to Winnipeg on Tuesday last. who has been here on a visit to her mother, Mrs. C. Walker, returned to her home in Toronto last week, accompanied by her sister Ruby. . 1911July 12 - Mrs. J. Felker, Toronto, is here on a visit to her mother, Mrs. C. Walker. . 1911 Oct. 18- Erin Fair Visitors: Mr & Mrs. J. Felker, Toronto, at Mrs. C. Walker's, 6,000 people attended the Fair last Friday. . 1911 Dec. 27- Mr. & Mrs. J. Felker, of Toronto; Mr. Frank Walker, of Smiths Falls; Miss I. Walker, with their mother, Mrs. Walker. . 1932 Jan 7 - Erin - Mrs. J. Felker an family & Misses Irene & Ruby Walker of Toronto, Mr. Hughes of Regina Sask. [ should be son Babe Walker of Regina, Sask?], spent Christmas with their mother, Mrs. Ella Walker. Notes2: For more Advocate social news, please look under the various individuals - PJA . 1935 Wellington Co., voters list: Mrs. Chas. widow, Erin. . 1938 Jun 30 - Ospringe - McCUTCHEON REUNION, held Saturday afternoon at the home of Mr Mrs Robert S McCutcheon, THIRD LINE, Erin, home offers McCutcheon settlers for 3 generations. The first McCutcheon came from Ireland over a 100 years go & purchased the home from the Crown. Inspire of unfavorable weather in early afternoon, 110 guest registered. Games & races: Races under 13: Helen Aitken & CHARLIE FELKER [born 1924] After the races, supper was served on the lawn, President Robt. McC. called the guests to order & extended to all a hearty welcome. MRS ELLA WALKER, gave a short history of the McCutcheon clan, which was very interesting. Ref: Acton Free Press. . ELLA HAMILTON'S FAMILY BIBLE: 12 X 9 X 4.5 inches thick. This Bible does not bear a publication date as such, but does have a publisher's note that it was entered into US Librarian of congress in 1876. The first entry for Richard & Jane's marriage was, thus entered at least two to three decades later. The Bible was then given to her eldest daughter, Jennie Walker, who in turned left it her eldest & only daughter, Marie Felker. The Bible then came to Marie's niece, myself, Patricia Felker Ahlberg. > Here I would like to make interesting notation: Between the pages of Luke XXI -XXII, there are several dark blue ink spots. Additionally, caught up in the binding was a broken & spent wooden match head. Grandmother Ella was well noted for smoking a pipe! - So which came first the flying match head or spilt ink? . First Family Record is a richly coloured Certificate of Holy Matrimony, Richard Hamilton of Acton & Jane M. McCutcheon of Erin Township on Thursday, Jany 24th, 1861 at Hugh McCutcheons by Revd. Joseph Unsworth, Congressional Minister, Georgetown. . HAMILTON, ESTATE FILE, WELLINGTON, #8251, RG 2, 1917 Nov. 17 Petition of Ella Hamilton Walker: city of West Toronto, York Co., Widow Jane M. Hamilton of the village of Erin, Wellington Co. left $1,000 in Real Estate. Signed, Ella M Walker WILL dated 1 November 1910, Died "I devise & bequeath the sum to my daughter Ella Walker & for her & assign excepting the sum of $400 which I bequeath to my grand-daughter Jennie Felker - Residue to my said daughter." Executrix is my daughter Ella Walker. Signed, Jane M. Hamilton Witnesses: Janette McDowell, Erin, William McDowell Arch H. MacDonald Solicitor. Real Estate Description: 1/1 7 of an acre, being part of Easterly half of Lot #14, 9th concession of Erin, described by metes & Bounds in a Conveyance dated 1 May, 1891, from Charles Staples, of Golden, Colorado, & his wife to the said Jane Matilida Hamilton. . Ontario Death Registration #5413, died Nov 17, 1917: Born Erin, 78 , 1839, Erin, Residence 855 Keele St., Toronto, housework, widow, died of cancer uteri, for 1 year. . DISCIPLES OF CHRIST. Briefly then, the Esquesing church grew peacefully into the principles of the Campbellian reformation, & in June, 184 3, the first June meeting of the Ontario Disciples, was held. On that occasion the name "Disciples of Christ" or "Christians" was used. The site of this meeting house was near Norval, actually on the Menzies farm, Lot 8, 10th line, Esquesing. So small was the log building, that at the first June meeting, Ash records that numbers of the listeners had to vacate their seats in order to permit others to hear. This Esquesing church was characterized by very strict discipline as to its members' conduct. For, with this strong desire to maintain the purity of the witness to the gospel, there was evident the air of exaltation & discovery which are elements in any youthful cause. There was not much experience to fall back upon, & the Bible was truly an honored medium of counsel toward maintaining a high standard of conduct with which to exalt the Christian profession; & who ca n deny the wholesomeness of such an aim? Consider the delicacy of the recording scribe who could indite upon his record s about a sister that had erred & been removed from fellowship- "for a crime mentioned in I Corinthians." ...This forest sanctuary to Christ which Esquesing folk raised, has long since passed from common knowledge, but the spiritual emanations from that Bible-loving people still grasp at the stars. > Please see the McCutchons on the separate McCutcheon Family of Erin, Wellington Co., Ontario. at Rootsweb.com . Research & transcriptions by PJ Ahlberg. Thank you. - - - | HAMILTON, Mary ELLA .2 (I968)
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12337 | Ella is the daughter of John Silas & Phebe Erie Patterson Myers. | MYERS, Nancy Ellen ELLA .2 (I19)
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12338 | Ella is the daughter of Julia Baldwin & Abram Lockwood Willson. | WILLSON, Ella Sarah (I1105)
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12339 | Ella is the daughter of Mary Blakewell & Wm. Ferguson, Brantford. | FERGUSON, Ellen May ELLA (I2290)
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12340 | Ella is the daughter of Mary Patterson and John Jamieson Watt, resided 74 Glenwoods Ave., Toronto (1923). John J Watt was born in Scotland 1867, emigrated in 1877, Shoe merchant. Mother Mary Patterson is missing from the 1901 Census with husband and the twins. 1911 Census, Toronto, 18 Churchill Avenue Wm. Patteron, b Nov 1848 Scotland, emigrated 1870, Pattern maker in a Pattern shop. Ann Patterson, b Aug 1860 in Scotland, emigrated 1870 Barton (?) Patterson, b Jul 1886, Ontario, Bookkeeper, General Electric. Ella Patterson, b Jul 1889, Ontario, Stenographer, office Mary Watt, Granddaughter, b.Nov 1898, Ontario Ella Watt, Granddaughter, b 1898, Ontario. Grey Monument, Park Lawn / Humbervale+, Etobicoke Twp. Cemetery, Toronto. MILLARD IN LOVING MEMORY OF ALFRED EARLE MILLARD 1895 - 1965 BELOVED HUSBAND OF ELLA JAMIESON WATT 1898 - 1994 - - - | WATT, Ella Jamieson (I378)
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12341 | Ella Loree married Irwin Hamilton, Farmer. Two children: Charles T Hamilton b 16 may 1898 Eramosa Edith E Hamilton, b 31 Dec 1990, Eramosa. Death Notice. HAMILTON, At her home on Everton on Sunday, February 23, 1878. Eleanor Jane Loree, beloved wife of the late Irwin Hamilton & dear mother of Edith (Mrs. Hxx Hancock, of Terra Cotta, Minnia(?) (Mrs. Aldred Cooling (?) & Elva M., William Alexander, both of Rockwood & Charles xx John x. Funeral service was held on Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock with interment in Everton Cemetery. Ref: Acton Free Press, 27 Feb 1958, page 8, column 4. - - - | LOREE, Eleanor Jane ELLA (I67)
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12342 | Ella Warner died young as a result of a fire. | WARNER, Ila (Ella) Kathleen (I2837)
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12343 | Ellen A Millard married Mervin Devonshire. | MILLARD, Ellen Anne (I639)
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12344 | Ellen Beatrice is the daughter of Horatio S T & Aguilla (Azilla?) Leavens. | LEAVENS, Ellen Beatrice (I124)
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12345 | Ellen Downes birth certificate reads. "10 Sep 1859, Born, Ellen, dau of james Downes, Private in the 4th Regiment of Foot, and Sarah Downes, formerly Taylor, at Healey's Court, Louth, Lincolnshire." When Ellen Downes father, James Downes, retired from the Army, the family moved to Salford where she married Henry Fern, a packing-case maker. Her first four children were born there. Then she and her family moved to Bolton where the other children were born. | DOWNES, Ellen (I314)
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12346 | Ellen is the daughter of William & Mary Ann Oakley Etzel. THREE Estell sisters married THREE argent brothers: Ellen Estell married John Sargent & Emma Louse Estell married Henry Sargent, & Mary Jane Estell married Cyrus Sargent. - - - | ETSELL, Ellen (I362)
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12347 | Ellen is buried in All Souls churchyard with her husband, Henry, in Bolton. | DOWNES, Ellen (I314)
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12348 | Ellen is the daughter of Elizabeth Ann Nichols & John Skippen. Ontario Marriage Registration 1123-84 William Parkinson, Age 24, farmer, Ontario, Bidwell, s/o Thomas & Charlotte, married Ellen Skippen, Age 21, Ontario, Bidwell, d/o John & Elizabeth, Witn: Frank Skippen, & Anne Bryon both of Bidwell Tp. on June 24, 1884 at Manitowaning. Three Parkinson children. - - - | SKIPPEN, Ellen .1 (I155)
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12349 | Ellen is the daughter of Jane Moore & Henry Skippen, . | SKIPPEN, Ellen C NELLIE .2 (I460)
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12350 | Ellen is the daughter of Mariah Higgins & John Willson Montgomery. Two Montgomery sisters married two Pooles: Ellen Montgomery married Franklin G Poole & Anna Mariah married Travis R Poole. . Ellen Montgomery married 17 Jan 1866 Franklin Greenwood Poole. . Their four children are: John Braxton Pool, Anna Isabella BELLE Poole, Mariah Louise Pool & Travis Hogue CHUB Poole. - - - | MONTGOMERY, Ellen Louise (I1246)
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