Tag Archives: genealogy

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 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.


What About All Those Other Leavoys?…Hannah Taylor

Continuing my determination to gather up and tell the stories of all of Achan Lavoy and Mary Ann Mackay’s children, here is my second installment in a series of posts on the stories of all those other Leavoys.

Hannah Lavoy was the second child born to Achan and Mary Ann. Census records date her birth as June 20, 1844, somewhere in the province of Quebec. Hannah would have lived in the Renfrew-Arnprior region of Ontario in the early years of her life, while her father farmed for half of the year and laboured with the lumber camps in the winter months.

Sometime around 1860, she met and married Enoch Taylor, an immigrant from England.  He arrived in Canada in 1849 when he was a boy of 9 years old, so one can imagine that he was well settled as a Canadian citizen when they met. Their first child whom I have record of from Canadian censuses, Rachel Taylor, was born in 1862 in Quebec. Therefore, my assumption of the marriage date wouldn’t be that far off.

Hannah and Enoch settled in West Toronto sometime before the census of 1871.  They resided in St. Patrick’s Ward, where Enoch (sometimes listed as “Amos”) worked as a painter.  This career would have barely fed and housed himself and Hannah, their 7-year-old daughter Rachel, and their 6-month-old baby William. Looking at the neighbouring families on the census, there is a sense that the diversity of St. Patrick’s Ward at the time would have made for the company of many others trying to get by as actors and shoemakers and labourers.

In the 1881 census, the family still resides in Toronto West (St. Patrick’s Ward), surviving on “Enos“‘s earnings as a painter. They now have another child for Hannah to care for, Frederick, who is 4 years old. Rachel, 18, is probably helping her mother care for Frederick and William E. who is 10 and is attending school. One year later, Rachel moved out and married a man named Albert Edward Moore, a scale maker from Kingston, and they moved into their own home in town to have a family.

After another 10 years went by, I found that the Taylor family stayed in St. Patrick’s Ward, making it an official home (they’d now been there for more than 20 years). It isn’t known to me whether or not they kept in touch regularly with the Lavoy side of the family. Looking at the 1891 Canadian census reveals that Hannah‘s husband, “Enos” likely had some difficulty paying all of the bills as a housepainter. They allowed a lodger into their home, who would have helped out and paid some rent to the family. A gentleman of 56, I wonder whether he would have had enough of an income to pay the Taylor family his dues, but this is simply speculation. As Rachel and William had grown up and moved out of the home, the extra body wouldn’t have taken too much additional space. Frederick Charles was now a growing adolescent of 14 years and another daughter, Lena A. (4 years old) would have been a growing handful.

In the 1901 census, Enos (62) and Hannah (57) are middle-aged. While Enos continues to work, they have settled on the additional income of a lodger and now have a 58-year-old woman from India living with them.  Frederick has moved out on his own and married to a woman called Anna Smiley in 1899, and the couple is left with their youngest, Lena who is 14. The beauty of this census record is that it gives dates of birth for each of these individuals. Lena married three years later to a clerk named Wallace Goodfellow.

The last census record available for this family is from 1911. Here the address of their dwelling is given: 71 Vanauley, now the site of a tavern and live performance venue in a lovely tree-lined square. Enos (70) and Hannah (66) are living again with Lena Alberta (21),whose husband recently died. They had only been married for one year before Typhoid killed him at such a young age.  Now all three of the Taylors are living together, unemployed. There is no lodger in the home, and they must have found it difficult to survive at their age.

Enos died 2 years later on June 25, 1913 while they still lived at that address. He was 75 years old and appears to have simply passed from his long years of labour.   Hannah lived for many more years, until the age of 89. On January 14, 1934, she died of stomach cancer which she had been treated for by her physician for about a year. Her death record shows that she had been living with her son Frederick at his home for 16 years after the death of her husband, at 764 Shaw st. and he was the informant of her death. She is buried at St. James Cemetery.


What About All Those Other Leavoys?…Nancy Cone

Today, much to my excitement, I noticed two different references to this website on both rootsweb and ancestry.com regarding the Leavoy family. This made me realize that I don’t yet have many postings on the other descendants of Achan Lavoy. I am determined to gather up and tell their stories, but will need the help of other descendants…this is where YOU, yes YOU reading this, decide to drop me a message!

I make note on my page about Achan and Mary Ann that they had six daughters and three sons: Nancy Cone/McGoon, Harriet Kerr, Hanna Taylor, Peter Levoy, Charlotte Parker, Mary Jane Hogg, William Leavoy, Etta Walker, James Edward Lavoy, and Amey Emma Brown. There are so many other Leavoy lines here that have yet to have been described. In this post I have decided to begin the long-winded story of the extended Leavoy family with the first of the children. Below is the beginning of a series of posts on the stories of all those other Leavoys.

The first child in the family was a daughter, Nancy Lavoy. According to census records, she was born on May 1, 1842, likely in McNab township (Arnprior, ON) where her parents were living and where her father farmed. At the time of Nancy’s birth, Arnprior was small and largely deserted. This is because the Scotsman who founded the town, Archibald McNab, lost his settlement rights in 1840. It wasn’t for another 10 years that development really progressed, and this is when large scale lumber operations on the Madawaska fueled the local economy. This means that while the Lavoy family was living hand-to-mouth early on, it was partly a matter of circumstance, based on where they lived. Nancy’s childhood would have been simple at best, and bleak at its worst.

Nancy appears to have been married twice. With the confirmation of Deb Lavoy (see comment below) through email correspondence, I’ve been assured that originally Nancy married to a John McGoon. This first marriage needs documents to fully confirm it, however there are several clues as to when she might have first married. As Deb has pointed out, in the 1871 census (the first that I’ve been able to Locate Nancy and her family in) there is a 5 year difference between the last two children, Hannah (9) and William (4). The eldest child would have been born in 1858, which means that Nancy’s first marriage would have been sometime around that year.  This means that Nancy would have married and had her first child at the tender age of 16.  She would have also been widowed as a 21-year-old. More research is needed on this short lived relationship to verify dates and parentage of Nancy’s first 3 children.

At age 23, Nancy married another American man named William Henry Cone. He was about 10 years her senior, born July 3 1832, and had moved up to Canada in 1839. It wasn’t until 1850 that he became a naturalized citizen of Canada, however, and he had been living and working with his younger brother David in Dalton, Michigan as a lumberman.

It was likely the development of the lumber industry in Arnprior that brought William Henry into town and into the life of Nancy Lavoy. While I have not found their official marriage record, I have traced the couple and their family throughout the 1871, 1881, 1891, 1901 Canadian censuses, observing their story over four decades.

In 1871, William Henry (who went by the name “Henry” at the time), a mature man of 39, worked as a carpenter in McNab township. He and Nancy, lived next door to her parents Achan and Mary Ann and six of her younger siblings. Eventhough Nancy was only 29, the couple already had a family of four children: Annie (13), John Alfred (11), Hannah Olive (9) and William Henry Jr. (4). The ages of these children reveal Nancy’s previous marriage left her with 3 children. Some of Nancy’s siblings who lived next door would have been around the same age as Annie, Alfred, and Hannah Olive Cone, and they likely played together.

By 1881, all but one of Nancy‘s siblings (the exception is the youngest, Amey) had moved out of her parent’s home two doors down, and her own family had burgeoned to 10 people. Four more children were added to the mix: David Saunders (8), Charlotte “Lottie” Grace (5), Harriet Louisa (2) and baby Frederick (10 months). Annie Cone, who would be 23 years old, no longer lived at home. The eldest, Alfred (20), helped out with the cost of living by working as a labourer, possibly alongside his grandfather Achan.

Elgin St., Arnprior 1900.

In the census of 1891, the family is now aged: William Henry is 58 and Nancy is 48. They are living with David Saunders (17) who works as an electrician, Lottie (Charlotte) who is now 15, Louisa (12) and Frederick C., who is 10 years old. The other older children have moved on, as have their grandparents: Alfred married a woman called Emilie Coram, and they and their family settled in Renfrew where he continued to work as an electrician. William Henry Jr. had married a woman called Mabel Louise Thompson from St. Catherines, they had already had 3 sons and were now living in Toronto. Sadly, this year William and Nancy’s daughter Hannah Olive Young died on August 11 of some form of illness. Her husband Alex Young, a blacksmith, reported and signed off on her death.

CPR Locomotive, North bay 1900

The last census where I find the Cone family in is that of 1901, where they have moved to Nipissing, North Bay as many other Lavoy family members did. The mining industry overtook the boom of forestry, and the Cone family had a second wind with the introduction of their grandchildren, the Young family, into the home. William Henry, by this time was a senior (68), but still worked as a pumper for Cor W Works (an Iron Works company), earning $640 per year. He and Nancy lived with their son Frederick who was now 20 years old and a machinist by trade. He brought home an additional $600 per year, which would have been helpful in feeding, clothing and schooling grandchildren Frederick (14) , Garnet A. (12) and Lottie Young (9). Also living in Nipissing were two daughters who followed with their new families whom they’d both married 5 years prior:  Charlotte “Lottie”, and Louisa.  Charlotte’s husband George Campbell, worked as a machinist, like his brother-in-law Frederick, to support his wife and three year old daughter. Louisa’s husband, Walter Evans, was a conductor for CN Railways and they lived with their son Milton.

William Henry Cone died at age 77 on March 27, 1908 of dementia. Nancy would have helped to care for him during his 3 month illness. I have found evidence that she lived with her daughter Charlotte and her family in Winnipeg where they moved with George Campbell’s work. Incidentally, Louisa and Walter Evans also lived in Manitoba at the time, so it appears that the family tried where they could to stick together. Frederick Cone stayed in Nipissing and his mother Nancy finally rejoined him sometime before her death in 1918. He married a woman called Norah James 8 years later.


A Big Manilla Envelope From Lindy

A wonderful woman called Lindy from Cape Breton first contacted me in February of 2008. She had found my information on rootsweb and sent an email to make a point of connection in our research on the McDonnell/Sergeant/Harrower family. Lindy had compiled a whole series of records of the family, from Frontenac and Lanark counties all the way back to Scotland. She was so generous in an email stating “I have PAGES of info for you!!!”. Some people say that and just fall back into the great electronic abyss. Lindy literally sent a whole manilla envelope for me to sort through. This is like coming into an attic treasure (without the cobwebs): although she has marked out different records and maps in blue post-it notes, I still find myself wading through a very deep lake of names, dates and blurry photocopied faces. I took an initial look after she sent the papers to me, but with my emerging career and other obligations in everyday life, this research was put on the back burner. Now that I have decided to actively blog about what I’ve been doing with my spare time over the past decade, I have a reason to splay all of these papers across my dusty wooden floor. I am using this blog to do my initial inventory on this booty.

The starting place for this package is a photocopy of an essay called James Harrower, Royal Highlander by Barbara R. Knutsen of Kelowna BC and Barbara & Donald Harrower of Bradenton, Florida (1991). This is a gorgeous read: with familiar language it tells the story of one of the earliest known ancestors in the Harrower family. I was so enthralled at the way this story was told and hope to have the same effect in my own family tales with some practice. To make sense of the people who I am discussing in this blog entry, I would first like to sketch out a rough and basic tree:

The above mentioned essay describes James Harrower who is my 5th great grandfather in my maternal grandmother’s family, the last of the Scottish ancestors in this line who stayed in that country’s highlands. A description of the man reveals that he was a highlander from Crieff, 5’7″, with grey eyes, brown hair and fair skin. He was also a soldier with the British Army who was caught up in that country’s fight against American rebellion during the Revolution. I would like to paraphrase my understanding of the essay here to share all of its meaty bits. This by no means is all that is told, and I recommend that those who are seriously interested get their hands on a copy of the original.

In 1774, as a young man (20 years old), James Harrower entered the 42nd Regiment of Foot, known as “The Royal Highlanders” or “The Black Watch”, which had grown for service overseas. His  involvement took him from Cork to a posting in the reserve British forces for the Battle of Long Island in America, which was the first major battle after the Declaration of Independence.  During this battle, in September of 1776 on York Island, James was wounded on both his right hand and foot. Despite this he remained a member of Captain John McIntosh’s company for another 3 years in the Long Island/New York area.

Black Watch private

In 1784, at age 30, James was admitted to the Royal Chelsea Hospital back in Scotland, having been “left lame” from his wound to the foot during his 10 years of military service. He was an outpatient, and was assigned to Garrison duty at Fort Augustus in the rugged Highlands of Scotland, where he helped to “curb the rebellious Scots”. During this year he was promoted from the rank of private to corporal in Capt. Elliot’s Independent Company of Invalids. It is also during this stationing at Fort Augustus that James Harrower married Ann Tulloch, daughter of Sgt. Michael Tulloch in 1786.

James and Ann Harrower had 10 children together who were all baptized at Bolskine parish: Catherine (1787), William (1789), James jr. (1792), Anne jr. (1794), Charles (1797), Margaret (1799), Elizabeth (1801), Hannah (1803), George (1805), Andrew (1807). By 1797 after the birth of their 5th child, James was again promoted, this time to the rank of Sgt., and served another 5 years with The Royal Invalids. His extensive military career continued further, where he later served the 6th Royal Veteran Battalion in Fort Augustus, concluding his posting as paymaster in 1810 when he retired. In all, James Harrower had served in the military for 36.5 years  before he was discharged at Fort George as a man in his mid-fifties. He was given a pension that took him back to his birthplace of Crieff as “beer marching money” (14 days pay of 1 pound, 12 shillings, 8 pence).

Fort Augustus, 1746

In 1818, 8 years after the trek home, his daughter Margaret (my fourth great grandmother) married John McDonnell. That same year, they made the decision to move to Upper Canada to homestead: likely fueled by James’ stories of the new world. They stayed in Glengarry county for several years where they had their first 5 children, and then settled in Lanark where three of her siblings had been granted land.

Three other children of James and Ann soon followed their sister to Canada. The Industrial Revolution brought hard times to Scotland, and the lure of Canada’s wealth of resources beckoned. Many Highlanders were encouraged to move to Lanark County, Ontario, where they were granted 100 acres per family and given seed and farm implements at cost with an advance of money to help them settle the land. Lanark and Dalhousie counties were in fact, as the essay explains, originally Scottish military settlements.Gaelic Book published to promote Scotch immigration

In 1822 Walter Sim, husband to Hannah Harrower, traveled across the sea along with younger her brothers George (17) and Andrew (14). Their trip from Quebec to Montreal by steamship, then from Montreal to La Chine by wagon & foot (10 miles), and onward to Prescott with small flat-bottomed floatillas 120 miles up river, brought them to a meeting place where earlier pioneers met them with wagons.  It was another 74 miles on land from Prescott to Lanark which took an additional 5 days. This difficult journey rewarded them with newly-surveyed crown land that they were assigned to make livable. Walter and George each were given 100 acres at lot 9, concession 4 in North Sherbrooke (Walter, the east half, George, the west) and Andrew shared the lot with his brother, the three of them likely working together to clear the land and construct their log shanty.  Five years later, John McDonnell joined them taking up the east half of lot 12, concession 4. Later he received two more lots in Palmerston.

The last of the Harrower family to arrive in Canada, Walter’s wife Hannah, came from Scotland accompanied by Walter and their children in 1832. Walter had gone back to fetch her nine years earlier, but her father, the great James Harrower who was described earlier, was ill and she would not leave him alone. His wife and other children seemed no longer in existence, so they waited until conditions were more favourable to make the long trip.  James, however, died the night before they left at age 79. While Walter was away, George had worked his half of the lot and had petitioned for it to be made his. This caused a bit of a family rift where Walter, who complained that this was not done with his consent, was forced to take up another property- lot 19, concession 2.North Sherbrooke properties

Later, in 1833, all 4 Harrower children (Margaret McDonnell, Hannah Sim, George and Andrew Harrower) attempted to appeal to the government that their land be granted to them for free because of their father’s service to the British Army during the Revolution. Because he was not living in America prior to his war service (as he came over from Scotland), he could not technically qualify as a United Empire Loyalist. They were not granted their claim. Despite this, they all stayed in the region: Andrew in Warwick county with his wife Sarah Williamson, their many children, and a child from his first wife Betsey Stokes; George in Lambton with his wife Eliza Williamson and their 8 children (they are buried in the pioneer cemetery); Walter and Hannah Sim stayed in North Sherbroke with their 8 children and were joined by Walter’s brother Robert (they’re buried in Crawford Cemetery); and my ancestors Margaret and John McDonnell also maintained their lots in North Sherbrooke & Palmerston with many many children.

This essay came with a large family tree which mapped out many of the known descendants- quite a tangled web. Many other documents were included in Lindy‘s package which attempt to further flesh out this Harrower-McDonnell connection. It is difficult to trace John McDonnell‘s life in Scotland, but Lindy believes that we can follow Scotch naming traditions and make an educated guess that his parents may have been called Donald/Daniel and Elizabeth/Elspeth. Their first son, James, was named for Margaret‘s father James Harrower, so their second son, Donald was likely named for his paternal grandfather. Elizabeth, their first daughter could have likely been named for her paternal grandmother, as their second daughter, Ann had been named for Margaret’s mother Ann Tulloch. This tradition was followed with other children, so this may be a starting point for searching out Scottish records for John’s family. Some hints to the McDonnell mystery may also lie in his early Canadian life in Glengarry county where there were many McDonnells. There is a family story that John had a brother named Hugh who came over to Canada in 1820, and would have likely settled in Glengarry. Lindy also sent a copy of a letter that one of the previously mentioned authors, Barbara Knudsen, wrote to St. Benedict’s Abbey in Fort Augustus. She looked into where John and Margaret married in Scotland, seeking out church records trying to determine if this Abbey may have been the place. Unfortunately, the priest’s register of their time has not survived. The current priest did affirm Barbara’s belief that John was a Glengarry Catholic because they spelled their name with an “ell” at the end as opposed to “MacDonald”.

St Benedictine Abbey, Fort Augustus

Other documents included in this package number maps of the Lanark county properties owned by the Harrower-McDonnell-Sim families, maps of Invernesshire, Scotland, photographs of some Harrower descendants, documents transferring property and further family data…too much to outline here. I will continue to sift through this fascinating history and add more to this story in the future.