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.




















