Category Archives: The Leavoy Line

What about all those other Leavoys?…a look at Henrietta Webber

Henrietta Lavoy, or Etta as she was commonly known, was the 8th child in Achan and Mary Ann Lavoy’s brood. She was born on July 6, 1856 in Sand Point, and grew up on the farm in the Renfrew area. While I’ve yet to have found her record of birth, the date is given on later censuses and is documented by other family members.

I have found her on the 1871 federal census of Canada at age 15, where she is listed as attending school along with her younger brother James (12), sister “Amie” (10) and being supported by the labours of her parents and older siblings Annie (21), Peter (17) and William H. (17). This is the only census record I have currently located where Henrietta is living with her parents in Canada.

About 8 years later a marriage record signals her independence from the family. On the 30th of July, 1879, Henrietta (22) married a young bachelor named Francis O McDonald (21), son of Charles and Elizabeth McDonald. He was a “stove filter” from Toronto, likely doing heavy physical labour as her father and brothers had done. I wonder if his job might have been mis-spelled on this record…should it be “stove filler”? If any of my readers have an idea of what this job was or what it entailed please comment! Their marriage record lists “Stephen” (this is the second time I have seen Achan called “Stephen”) and Mary Lavoy as her parents.

Thus far in my research on Henrietta, I have been unable to find her until 1900. This ghost woman’s 20 year gap can be somewhat filled with information found on the United States Federal Census in Detroit (below). A little over one year after her marriage to Francis McDonald, Henrietta gave birth to her first child, a daughter named Emma McDonald (December 1881). Her second child, James E. McDonald, was born in August of 1883.

Whether or not Henrietta and Francis planned on growing their family we will never know. Francis disappears from the history, and my assumption is that sometime between 1883 and 1885 he died. I am still looking for his death record or any indication that he lived beyond this time. What I do know is that in 1885 Henrietta and her two children moved across the border to Michigan and that she remarried in 1897.

The above document shows the great transformation that took place after 1883 in Henrietta’s life. Here, she is three years into her second marriage with a patched-together family. She has been living in the United States for 15 years now, which means that she moved not long after the birth of her son James McDonald.  She rented a house at 1391 Hastings street with family, an area that is now in this century a dilapidated industrial part of town, filled with abandoned warehouses and overpasses. Here she lived with her new husband, her two teenage children from the previous marriage, and a baby girl named Gladys E. Webber from her new marriage. Her second husband, Morton Webber, was born in Massachusetts and is much younger than she (only 29!). His work in the trades as a Wood Turner, and her daughter Emma’s labour (18) as a “wire worker”, supports the family of five. Again, I am unclear of what this work as a “wire worker” would have entailed, but in my searches I have found this title in both the jewelry trade and in the production of barbed wire.

This wasn’t the first major move for Henrietta and her family: in 1910 they had moved to Chicago, Cook County, Illinois. Morton (45) works in a chair factory to support his wife, Henrietta (now 48) and their daughter Gladys (11).

Where did Henrietta’s children Emma & James McDonald end up?

Emma likely married and started a family, although I have not yet tracked her down. Henrietta’s son, James, certainly did. He married in 1907 to a woman called Katherine and they stayed on Mornaby street in Wayne, Michigan. His job as a “laborator” in an auto factory supported the family: son Francis E. McDonald (named for his deceased grandfather) who was born in 1909 and daughters Lillian W. McDonald (born 1912) and Violet A. McDonald (born 1914). He may have had a larger family, but I have since tracked him only until 1920.

The lot where Henrietta Webber once lived (1920)

I have found the Webber family, again in 1920, living in Chicago at a rental home (number 544 North Kedzie Avenue). The house no longer stands (see photo, left), but it looks like it was a blossoming neighbourhood in 1920 where immigrants from Italy & Germany neighboured many others from Michigan. Morton (50) and Henrietta (56) are now living off his income as a cabinet maker in a nearby factory. Their daughter, Gladys (19) still lives at home and helps to contribute by working as a office stenographer.

Henrietta (70) and Morton Webber (60) stayed in Chicago. What is a more interesting turn in the story is the living arrangement that they had with daughter Gladys. The census reveals that the family is now 3 generations living under one roof for a monthly rent of $65/month. Gladys E. Webber (28) is married and has a daughter named Henrietta (2 years, 6 months old) for her grandmother. Gladys’ husband is her half cousin, William Lavoy (43) who recently came to the USA in 1920. This means that Gladys then became a Lavoy, like her mother!

At this time, Morton still made cabinets and furniture, and Gladys continued to work as a stenographer for an insurance company. William Lavoy was a general carpenter and may have worked alongside his father-in-law. They must have lived this way, with their daughter, son-in-law and grandaughter, until the end of their lives. Henrietta (76) passed away on April 18, 1838, and was buried at Woodlawn cemetery in Proviso, Cook County. On her death record her parents are listed as “Aiken” and Mary Ann Mackay. Morton (66) followed soon behind, and in on December 3, 1940 he was buried at her side.

I would love to find the descendants of this family. If you know of them or you are a member, please don’t be shy to comment!


What About All Those Other Leavoys?…A look at William Henry Lavoy

William Henry Leavoy. Photo courtesy of Jim Smith.

There is much information collected on William, the second son of Achan and Mary. In fact, before I ever really uncovered the story of his brother Peter, who is my great x 2 grandfather, I found stories, census records and family members all talking about William. This is largely due to the fact that he was written about extensively by his grandson, Wilfred Ronald Leavoy in an autobiography, and consequently this is where much of the meat of my story is gathered from. To read from this primary source beyond the quotes I give, click here. The research that informs this story is largely census-based, and is supplemented by family stories and photographs submitted by readers of this blog. A big thank you to these other Leavoys!

William’s story begins on September 5, 1854. The seventh child and middle son of the family seemed to be well received and was considered by others as “handsome[…] a noted singer, dancer and river dancer.”(Robin Murphy)  These characterizations come from his years as a young man, but even as a child he was special. It is claimed by his grandson that he was the first white boy to be born in the village of Pontiac, Quebec.

At age 17, the 1871 census of Canada has captured a picture of William’s youth and what it might have been like. In the McNab district of South Renfrew, the family of seven children lived with parents “Aken” and Mary, and sister Mary Jane‘s husband with their 2-month-old baby, Mary Ann.  This was a multi-generational home built on lumbering in the dark months and farming in the summer. Peter, two years William’s senior, is listed as a labourer, but William neither attends school or works…at least not on paper. Yet we know from family stories that William followed his father in the logging camps and was likely out in the bush as soon as he could drive horses and had left school. His grandson has noted that “[h]is family had very little schooling, with a large family on a farm; they had to dig in to help feed the rest.” This means that all of the boys in particular would have entered the workforce early. He would have worked hard, indeed, moving up in the ranks with his talent and brawn so that as a young man he was in some position of authority. W. R. Leavoy described it thus:

[m]y Grandfather followed the logging and as a young man became a foreman which meant you were like a Captain on a ship. When you went into the woods in the fall you took your men, horses and supplies to last five months and in most cases when the snow got deep you were pretty well isolated. You had to be able to lick any man in the camp as you couldn’t call the cops. There were none. No phones and no radio either. You were there till the ice went out then the men drove the logs down the rivers to the sawmills. It was a terrible job, wet and cold and quite a few graves lined the river banks as the logs would get caught and pile up in the narrow places along the river. Then you have a logjam. They would have to pry the key logs out and sometimes the whole thing would let go suddenly, crippling some and drowning some.

From this character-filled story we can see that the Leavoy boys, William included, needed to be smart working in these dangerous conditions.

I have found William at age 25 on a voters list living further south along Lake Ontario, in Colbourne. He would have been married at this time and trying to make a fresh life of his own. The voter’s list gives his place of residence as Lot 6 concession 5. But by age 26, only a year later, William was already a widower. His little recorded first marriage to a woman named Janet McWhirter ended with her premature death at age 25. She was buried in the Carlow United Church cemetery with her family. One Leavoy family member has noted that this couple had 2 children together: Eva Maude Leavoy (born April 8, 1883) and Mary Anne Leavoy (born 23 July 1884). If you have more information on this first marriage, do comment at the end of this blog entry!

Janet Hamilton Hynes. Photo courtesy of Jim Smith.

His second marriage came a year later, to Janet Hamilton Hynes  (24), daughter of another farming couple, William and Ellen (Tefler) Hines. On his marriage certificate he is listed as a widower, confirming that his first wife, Janet McWhirter, had in fact died. His parents are listed as “Stephen” (another curious spelling!) and Mary Ann. The witnesses were Thomas & Jessie Stewart were of the nearby prominent Stewart family and may have been relations to sister-in-law Agnes (Stewart) Lavoy.

This couple had fourteen children together between 1883 and 1908. The first two children died as infants (the 12 surviving children were: William A., Teresa, Ellen J., James H., Geneve, Ernest W., Wilfred Garnet, Hannah, Abbott Raymond, Iva E., Kenneth P., Maurice) and one can imagine that the first few years of their marriage would have been difficult in light of this. It isn’t surprising to see that the couple was documented as being particularly religious  on the following census.

The first census document to list William and his second marriage is that of 1891. Living on a farm in Hastings North, they have five children and subscribe to the religion Plymouth Brethren, a conservative evangelical Christian movement of their time. Children William Henry Jr. (born December 31, 1885), Tressa Mabel (born 23 February 1887), Elleanor “Ellie” Irene (born 11 March 1888), James Herbert (born 11 April 1889) and Genevieve Gertrude (born 17 October 1890) would have been supported by their father’s farming and would be raised in a community of farmers from all kinds of European countries.

Ten years later the Leavoy clan still resided in the North Hastings area, but had grown considerably as would be expected of a farming family. The couple now lived with their eleven children ranging from infancy to mid teens. Eldest son, William jr.(15) attends school for 4 months a year, and likely helped his father, uncle James and grandfather Achan who were now all neighbours. Teresa (14) and Ellen (13) also attend school for 4 months. Younger brother James (11) only attends for 1 month and Genevieve (10) doesn’t go at all.

   

The Leavoy sisters in 1956. In the front row are (left-right): Pearl (Leavoy) Hazlett, Iva (Leavoy) Burwash, Tressa (Leavoy) Gates, Ellie (Leavoy) Henderson. Photo courtesy of Garnet Leavoy.

Hanna (Leavoy) Price and son, Norman. Photo courtesy of Garnet Leavoy.

Daughter Genevieve Gertrude Leavoy. Photo courtesy of Garnet Leavoy.

Added to their roost are children: Ernest Wellington (born 17 June 1892), Wilfred Garnet (born 9 July 1894), Hannah Effie (born 15 September 1895), Edward/Abbott Raymond ( born 1 March 1897), Iva Emily (born  22 May 1899) and Harriet “Pearl”. (born 9 July 1901). The last child to be born to the couple, who had not yet arrived, was a son called Maurice Reynold (born 10 February, 1908).

In 1911, William and Jannet were recorded in south Renfrew with the spelling of their last name as Lavoi. William’s father Achan died in 1902, signalling a change in living arrangements: they were no longer neighbours. In their 50s, they still supported a family with young children, but now had one of their eldest daughters and their son in law living with them. Their children Wellington (this is “Ernest W.” from the previous census, now 18) and Garnet (“Wilfred” from the previous census, now 16) both worked on their family farm at Lot 5. Daughters Hannah (15), Edith (Iva from the previous census), Pearl and Maurice all still live at home. The dates given for their births in this census conflict with those of the census 10 years prior, making their exact ages difficult to decipher. Another change that this document gives evidence of is the marriage of their second daughter “Ella” or Ellen (age 22).  She and her husband John Henderson (25), moved in with the Lavoy family,  likely giving help with expenses as John works as a machinist in nearby Coxandum mine, earning $750 in a year.

Cross-referencing this census information with the autobiography of William’s grandson gives further insight into these living arrangements.  He notes that two years prior to this census date, gold had been discovered in nearby Porcupine Creek and heavily forested and rough farm land was being offered in the Mattheson area for a cheap price of 50 cents per acre.  Interestingly, Mattheson has since been known for its gold. The Lavoy family moved into the area, scooping up four farms: one for William Sr., William Jr. and his new wife Annie Mae (McPherson), one for son Raymond, and another for Ella and John Henderson. They settled in the area along the railroad in Mattheson in 1913, according to W.R. Leavoy.  Unfortunately, in 1916, much of the town burned down and William Jr.’s two homes were lost in the great fire.

After this census, none other are publicly available. We are lucky, however to have family members willing to share photos, details and stories of their own. We also have a great storyteller in the family who has written from personal experience, Wilfred Ronald Leavoy, a man whose story is worth reading for those who are interested in the greater details of this family’s story.

Janet (Hamilton) Leavoy funeral, July 6, 1922. Pictured in this image are the following (left-right): sons Maurice, William H. jr. and Wellington, husband William Henry Leavoy Sr., sons Raymond H. and Garnet. Photo courtesy of Garnet Leavoy.

photograph courtesy of Garnet Leavoy

Suffice to say that in 1922 William’s wife Jannet died and he later followed in 1938, after continuing to farm with the help of his grandchildren. This family, as many of the others in the Leavoy clan, had a great impact on the Canadian landscape. They participated in the ‘taming of the land’ from Quebec to Lake Ontario and left their mark in the farm fields, forests and mines. The couple is buried in Carlow cemetery, in the Ottawa valley, Ontario (Canada).


Helen (Leavoy) Boomer 1921-2011

On October 18, 2011 Helen Boomer passed away early in the morning in the home where she had been living in Windsor, Ontario.

Grandma Helen was a beautiful woman. This is what stands out the most about her: how lovely she appears in all of her photographs, and how she carried herself with a sense of pride. I believe that somewhere in Grandma there was an artist: a woman who could express herself beautifully by making things.

In my room I have a box that Grandma Helen once decoupaged. It is a golden-green, adorned with summer lilies and daffodils, some raised, and all placed just so. The handle of the box was selected for its suppleness and golden colour. In its velvet interior is a delicate handkerchief that she must have used at some point in time. It reminds me of the care that Grandma’s generation took to all that they did: all of the small details carry a sense of duty, pride and loveliness. I suppose that her aesthetics were passed down to my mother and I, the need to make things beautiful and inspiring in our lives. For this I am thankful.

As a child, when visiting family in Windsor, I often had to share a bed with Grandma. I remember looking through her lipsticks and brooches, dazzled. Grandma had an aura of glamour that was impressive and in this sense she performed beauty as an art. At a few points in time I made attempts to carry this glamour in my own appearance through plastic gummy bracelets and sparkled or touled hairbands, but these were difficult shoes to fill.

The other side of Grandma that I would like to remember is her character: something surprisingly willful and defiant. I remember her smoking in the National Art Gallery bathroom long after the ban. She also told stories of her and her sister’s escapades across the border as youth (these stories should remain private here, but suffice to say that they are a good laugh). This could be something playful and vital, and at other times frustrating and shocking.

As an adult, I recognize the transformative hardships that Grandma and many people of her generation went through. The strength that she must have had to persist through difficult times: her willful character, and possibly even an important ability to forget these difficulties. These are other qualities that we might not recognize at first, but they must be acknowledged.

Grandma Helen lived a long and impactful life. I will remember her and all of her stories.

Public visitation of her casket will be on Friday, October 21, 2011 from 1:00-5:00 pm at Family First Funeral Home (Dougall Ave.) in Windsor, Ontario. Her funeral service and internment will be on Saturday, October 22, 2011.


What About All Those Other Lavoys?…Mary Jane Hogg

I’ve taken a hiatus from my research for a few weeks to enjoy the summer sun that has just arrived in Vancouver, and to contribute to another one of my blogs. Today I realize that I have much work ahead of me if I am to complete the small task of writing the story of each of Achan & Mary Ann’s children. My focus for this chapter in the Leavoy story is Mary Jane Hogg.

According to several Canadian census records, Mary Jane was born in the year 1848, in Pontiac, Quebec along the Ottawa River where her family had first lived and logged. A date has been produced by other family members for her birth (8 May) although none of my records verify these particulars. I will need descendants to provide a source for this information before I stand behind it.

On the 10th of March in 1870, a Methodist wedding was held by Peter H. Lindsay in Arnprior for the 21 year old Mary Jane and her suitor. William Hogg (29), a Millwright from Nepean, son of James Hogg and Ann Jane Hobbs married the daughter of “Etienne Lavoy” (note the spelling) and Mary Ann Mackie. The wedding was witnessed by William H. Cone (Mary Jane’s brother-in-law, married to her elder sister Nancy) who was living in McNab township at the time.

One year after her marriage to William, Mary Jane Hogg was documented on the 1871 Canadian census. She and her husband are living with her parents and siblings. They have had their first child, a daughter named for her grandmother, Mary Ann Hogg, who at the time was only 2 months old. This means that she was conceived not long before the wedding (and possibly this spurred the marriage). What interests me about this census document is the fact that her parents are listed as illiterate, while Mary Jane and William are able to read and write. Also notable on this record is that Mary Jane’s elder sister Nancy Cone and her family live next door. This was likely a tightly knit and financially interdependent family group.

Within the following decade the Hogg family moved into a home of their own in the “unorganized territory” of North Renfrew (meaning that it had not yet been divided into townships), which they would have purchased on a Millwright’s salary. By this time William (40) and Mary Jane (33) were supporting 3 children: Mary Ann (now 12),  William Jr. (8), and Louisa (3). I am still trying to define what type of Millwright William was: I know later from his death certificate (read on further for this) that he operated a mill himself. Along the Madawaska River there were many mills where entire towns were built around them. For example, Arnprior proper was originally centered on the shop, grist mill and saw mill, in the early 1830s. By the 1870s, Arnprior had become one of the largest shipping points of lumber in Eastern Ontario (pg.6, Town of Arnprior Downtown Heritage Conservation District Study). There are still examples of some of these old mills in existence, such as the McDougall Mill Museum which I visited with my classmates as a child.

Despite the family’s apparent relative prosperity, it was not to last. Mary Jane Hogg, a 32 year old woman, died giving birth to their 4th child, Mary, in the following year.  The informant of her death was Mrs. A. Lavoy, who might have likely been Agnes Lavoy (my great x 2 grandmother, married to Mary Jane’s brother Peter). Sadly, despite the successful live birth of the baby girl on February 1st, 1882, she died 5 days later as a premature infant.

And so, the Hogg family of four was left without a wife/mother and feeling the loss and emptiness that came with the death of an infant. It would have been a devastating blow, as the children were all quite young. After Mary Jane’s death, the family moved on in separate directions.

I’ve been unable to successfully track her widower William Hogg through the 1891 census, although he may have been living with a brother in Lanark county (this needs verification). He eventually moved to North Bay as his children also did. He died on March 30, 1898 in Nipissing District from congestion of the lung. The record of his death confirms that he was born in Nepean, Ontario and that he was a mill owner.

On the 28th of January, 1891 the first child, Rachel Hogg (who then claimed to be 21), married a 28-year-old locomotive engineer and widower called Charles Edward Stewart. Born in Brockville, he would have moved out to North Bay  as the Leavoys and Hoggs had done for work. They stayed in North Bay as long as work was available, but moved westward with the family they raised. By 1901, Rachel (29) and Charles Stewart (40) were living in Brandon, Manitoba neighbouring a John Lavoy (39, Hotel Manager) and his family. This was likely a cousin to Rachel, although I have yet to place him. They had a family of three children: Charles Jr. (17) and Florence (16) from Charles’ first marriage and William (7) born to Rachel and named for his grandfather. Eventually Rachel ended up out in Hanna, Alberta where she died at age 58 on September 2, 1929.

The older children, William Hogg Jr. and Louisa also moved to Nipissing as their sister and father had done. The brother (27) and sister (21) can be found living together in the 1901 census, surviving on William’s $900/year salary as a lumberman. The fact that the two stayed together is somewhat reassuring as it seems that the family may have dissolved somewhat with the death of their mother some two decades prior. By this time their father, the mill owner, had passed away too, and their older sister was now married and in Manitoba. This is the last I have found on the siblings, and would love to know what became of them.


Time travelling with the help of a caulking iron

There are many descendants of the man called Achan Lavoy. They may know him as Ecan or Aken or Edward or Etienne, but regardless of the spelling, most individuals seem to be aware of his mythic appearance in Canada from France. I have written of his work as a cook for the lumber camps during the winter months, but one thing I have not written much of is his life in the boat building industry. A valuable skill during the 1800s in a region that was heavily logged, this was also passed down to his son, my ancestor, Peter Leavoy.

Descendant, Lanney Lavoy has kindly contacted me regarding this aspect of Achan’s life. He has been fortunate enough to inherit some relics through the generations: objects that allow us the opportunity to time travel and imagine the life of our ancestor in the late 1700s and early 1800s. Lanney seems to have grown up in the seat of some prime Leavoy territory, Carlow Ontario.  William Lavoy and James E. Lavoy, sons of Achan, and their families lived in Carlow and were buried in the cemetery there. This descendant first tipped me off to his own family’s immediate connection to Achan with an exciting comment:

“My grand father, Edward Andrew (Ned), grandson of Achan, told me Jim Mackey (Achan’s father in-law) was a ships carpenter. I have a caulking iron that came down through the family [and] there was also a ship builders adze but the where abouts are unknown at this time. […]The history of that area at that time was very interesting and ship builders and carpenters would have been a much needed trade.”

With Lanney‘s permission, I have decided to post photographs (left) of the one relic he was able to find and document. These images are of the caulking iron: an object whose worn texture can transport us to a time 300 years ago. Achan Lavoy was in possession of this tool and it quite possibly even came from his father-in-law, Jim Mackey. Achan and/or Jim would have used this 12 inch long iron with a mallet to drive tarred rope into the joints between wooden planks on a boat. The hammer marks that are clearly visible on the tool suggest that it was hand forged. These images, however small, give us all an opportunity to imagine an era and a lifestyle that we are only a few generations removed from today.

Thank you to Lanney Lavoy for sharing these photographs.