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Notes |
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At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: F3
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Copy of their Marriage Recording from the Archives Nationales du Quebec -St. Jean-French Presbyterian Church, Montreal, Quebec January 09, 1877( R. Leggault ) | Family: F224
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At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: F1
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{Transcript of Official Record}
William Ralph Carmichael, Industrial Chemist of the City of Verdun son of William R Carmichael and of Edith Ann Smith his wife, bachelor and of full legal age, and;
Joan Williamson, Stenographic of the City of Montreal, daughter of Samuel Williamson and of Helen Stout his wife, spinster and of full legal age, were married by authority of Banns published for three Sundays as required by law, on the third day of June, one thousand nine hundred and thirty nine, in the presence of,
Subscribing witnesses | Family: F7
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1911 Census:
Address: 2433 Knox St.
http://www.automatedgenealogy.com/census11/Test16.jsp?id=2732 | Ann
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1901 Census: Hochelaga, Saint-Gabriel Ward, b-29, pg 3
Year of Immigration: 1874
Religion: Presbyterian
Address: 100 Charron St. | Margaret (Carmichael)
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HH says Charles homestead was SE16-13-24 | Charles William Anderson
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Charles helped REO Olds make their first car. When the company was sold to General Motors, he was terminated. He contested, however, and upon careful examination of his contract with Olds, it was discovered that he was guaranteed either his job or a full pension. General Motors chose to employ Charles for several years until his retirement. | Charles Henry Blades
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{transcription of obituary appearing 22 Nov 1922}
Mrs. Hazel Sinclair, 33, wife of Arthur Sinclair, social director of the Reo Motor Car company, 1814 Delevan ave., died at the University hospital, Ann Arbor, Saturday morning after a long illness.
Mrs. Sinclair, who before her marriage was known to many Lansing friends as Hazel Blades, graduated from the high school in 1905 and then entered the Michigan Agricultural college where she became a member of the Ero Alphian society. From there she went to the Ypsilanti to attend the State Normal and became a graduate of that college. Then followed five years of teaching in the Lansing schools. She was a member of the First Presbyterian Church and took an active part in young people's work in the Sunday school.
Besides her husband and sons, Arthur Charles, two years, and John Hart, three weeks old, she is survived by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Blades, and her grandmother, Mrs. Anna Glen, 900 W. Washtenaw st., and two brothers, Harold, of the engineering department of the Motor Wheel company, and Glen, of the New York Fruit exchange, Rochester, N.Y.
The funeral will be held at the home of her parents, Tuesday at 10 a.m. Rev. G. W. Simons of the First Presbyterian church will officiate. Interment will be at Mt. Hope cemetery | Hazel Jennie Blades
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Appeared Tuesday, March 18, 2003 in the Huron Daily Tribune
Janette I. Rapson, 82, of Harbor Beach, passed away Saturday, March 15, 2003, in the long term care unit of the Harbor Beach Community Hospital following an extended illness. Born in Harbor Beach on Nov. 10, 1920, she was the daughter of the late Lewis and Leota (Sample) Blashill. Janette and William Rapson were united in marriage on May 16, 1947 in Port Huron. She was a member of the First Presbyterian Church in Harbor Beach. She is survived by her husband, William Rapson of Harbor Beach; children, John Rapson and his wife, Bonnie, of Port Austin, Nancy Rapson of Harbor
Beach; two grandchildren, Arminta Charmichal and her husband, Collin, of Waterloo, Ontario and Thomas Rapson and his fiance, Renee Gottschalk, of Port Austin. Janette was preceded in death by three children, William George Rapson, Corinne Leigh Rapson and Robert William Rapson; four brothers, Cliff, Roy, Lloyd and Glen Blashill; three sisters, Sylvia Wilson, Hilda Blashill and Velma Blashill. A memorial service will be conducted at 2 p.m. on Thursday, March 20, 2003, in the First Presbyterian Church of Harbor Beach with the Rev. Theresa Cutler, pastor officiating. A private family burial will take place in the Rockfalls Cemetery, Harbor Beach. Visitation will be from 1 p.m. until the time of services at the church. Ramsey Funeral Home of Harbor Beach is handling arrangements. Memorials may be made to American Lung association or St. Judes Hospital. | Irene Janette Blashill
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Birth Certificate
No. 483In the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty four, the twenty-sixth of the month of September, at eleven o’clock in the morning, appeared before us Ludovicus Arnoldus van Berkel, Alderman, registrar of births, deaths and marriages of the City of Delft, John Brammer, age thirty years, director of a pottery factory, residing in this city, who declared to us that Margaret Stampert, age thirty years, his wife, gave birth to a child of the female gender on the twenty-fourth of September of this year at half past six in the morning in his home in district three, number three hundred and forty-nine, which child he gave the forename Marij.This declaration was made in the presence of Gerrit Schimmel, age forty-one years, bookkeeper, and of Alexander Machiel Willige, age forty-nine years, labourer, residing in this city. And, after having been read this certificate aloud, the father and the witnesses signed this certificate with us.
(http://delft.digitalestamboom.nl/) | Mary Brammer
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At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living
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At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living
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1901 Census: Montreal #174, Saint-Anne Ward, a-40, pg 12
Age: 11
Religion: Congregationist
Address: 295 Bourgoies St. | Edith Lilian Carmichael
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1901 Census: Montreal #174, Saint-Anne Ward, a-40, pg 11
Age: 52
Year of Immigration: 1880
Religion: Congregationist
Profession: Mechanist
Earnings: 600
Address: 295 Bourgoies St. | Henry Carmichael
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1901 Census: Montreal #174, Saint-Anne Ward, a-40, pg 12
Year of Immigration: 1880
Age: 21
Religion: Congregationist
Profession: Blacksmith
Earnings: 432
Address: 295 Bourgoies St. | Henry Carmichael
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1901 Census:
http://www.automatedgenealogy.com/census/ViewFrame.jsp?id=89314&highlight=16
1911 Census:
Address: 90 Rushbrooke
http://www.automatedgenealogy.com/census11/Test16.jsp?id=2965 | Isabella Carmichael
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2. Information from Mount Royal Cemetery Company, Montreal, Quebec:John (son of William and Agnes) purchased Section F - Graves 1044 C-D-E-:but there is no record of his burial here
R. Leggault. | John Carmichael
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1901 Census: Montreal #174, Saint-Anne Ward, a-40, pg 12
Age: 18
Religion: Congregationist
Profession: ??? Office
Earnings: 240
Address: 295 Bourgoies St.
1911 Census:
Address: 90 Rushbrooke
http://www.automatedgenealogy.com/census11/Test16.jsp?id=2965 | John Brammer Carmichael
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1901 Census: Hochelaga, Saint-Gabriel Ward, b-29, pg 3
Year of Immigration: 1874
Religion: Presbyterian
Profession: Blacksmith
Earnings: 500
Address: 100 Charron St.
http://www.automatedgenealogy.com/census/ViewFrame.jsp?id=43168
1911 Census: Hochelaga, 7 St. Gabriel, page 16, line 42
Year of Immigration: 1874
Religion: Presbyterian
Profession: Blacksmith
Employer: R.R. Shop
Earnings: 900
Address: 100 Charron St. | Laurence Carmichael
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1901 Census: Montreal #174, Saint-Anne Ward, a-40, pg 12
Age: 25
Religion: Congregationist
Address: 295 Bourgoies St. | Maggie Carmichael
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1901 Census: Montreal #174, Saint-Anne Ward, a-40, pg 12
Age: 16
Religion: Congregationist
Profession: Weaver
Earnings: 144
Address: 295 Bourgoies St. | Mamie Carmichael
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At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living
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At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living
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Baptismal Record:
William Ralph, Son of Henry Carmichael, machinist and of Mary Brammer, his wife was born on the 17th day of January 1888 years and was baptised by me this 12th day of March 1891 years. [signed by Minister & parents]
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1901 Census:
Montreal #174, Saint-Anne Ward, a-40, pg 12
Age: 13
Religion: Congregationist
Address: 295 Bourgoies St.
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1911 Census:
Address: 2433 Knox St.
http://www.automatedgenealogy.com/census11/Test16.jsp?id=2732
Obituary:
CARMICHAEL, William Ralph. At the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, on July 14th, 1963, beloved husband of Edith Ann Smith, father of William Ralph. Funeral from D.A. Collins Chapel, 55610 Sherbrooke St., W., on Tuesday, at 1 p.m. to Mount Royal Cemetery. (The Montreal Gazette, Tuesday, July 16, 1963 p. 31) | William Ralph Carmichael
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CARMICHAEL, William Ralph (Bill). (Formerly of Montreal). At Hawkesbury on March 11, 1993, Bill Carmichael, in his eighty-second year. Beloved husband of Joan Williamson. Dearly loved and respected by his children and grandchildren: Ralph, Linda, Colin, and Sarah Carmichael, Joan, Alex, Kathy, Michael and Peter Barontseff, Audrey, Richard, Graeme, Anne, Trevor and John Bowie. Resting at the Hillcrest Funeral Home, 151 Bond Street (corner of Stanley Street), Vankleek Hill, Ontario, where the Carmichael family will receive friends from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday March 12, 1993. Funeral service Saturday, March 13, 1993, at 2:00 p.,. at the Knox Presbyterian Church, John Street, Vankleek Hill, Ontario. There will be a time of fellowship following the service. Interment in the Spring at the Greenwood Cemetery, Vankleek Hill. In remembrance gifts may be made to the Masonic Foundation or to a preferred charitable organization. (The Montreal Gazette, Saturday, March 13, 1993, D7) | William Ralph Carmichael
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John A. Cornell, "The First Church of Beverly" | Annie Cornell
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Britnell, William E., Wills of Esther and Joseph Hillborn | Esther Cornell
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Will of Rev. John A. Cornell
Kulp, Kenneth A., "The Cornells of Sheffield"
Cornell, John A., "The Pioneeers of Beverly"
Cornell, John A., "The FIrst Church of Beverly" | John A. Cornell, Rev.
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Samuel Cornell family Bible, Mott Coll., Norwich Archives | Samuel Cornell
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Mrs. Arline McKay, family Bible
John A. Cornell, "The First Church of Beverly"
Martin Moore, Moore family Bible | Sarah Cornell
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Kulp, K.A., "The Cornells of Sheffield," 1958, p. 13
Cornell, John A., "The Pioneers of Beverly," p. 134
Cornell, John A., "First Church of Beverly," p. 15, 23
Doherty, FJ, "Pioneers of Beekman," Vol. 3
Glazier, Prentiss, "Thomas Cornell of MA, RI and NY" (account in this
source is badly flawed)
Waterloo Co. Land recs. (wife's name) | Sylvanus Cornell
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"Al, fourth child of Norman and Jane, was born at Hamiota on May 2, 1930. Educated at the Collegiate there, he later attended the Manitoba Technical Institute in Winnipeg from 1950-1951, where he took a course in Air Conditioning and Refridgeration. After his five year apprenticeship in the trade, Al started his own business in 1959, under the name of Fort Garry Refridgeration and Air Conditioning. In 1976, he sold his interests to his partner, and has a new business under the name of Dale Refridgeration.
On July 16, 1955, he married Margaret Elaine Slimmon of Shoal Lake, Manitoba, and took up residence in Fort Garry.
Aren is in the business of Refridgeration, presently serving his apprenticeship. Larry and Greg have graduated from Grade 12 and are working locally. Kerrin is in attendance at Pembina Crest High School." - Dale Tales, 1980, p.36 | Allan Sheridan Dale
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008775-84 ( Oxford Co) Amos DALE, 25, school teacher, Drumbo, St. George, s/o Andrew DALE & Margaret PORTER, married Hariet Ann SHIPMAN, 19, Bosanquet, Princeton, d/o Issac SHIPMAN & Margaret J. CORNELL, witn: A.R. McNICHOL of Winnipeg & Libbie LEWIS of Brampton, 25 Dec 1883 at Princeton | Amos Dale
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Appears on Beverly Twp. Voters List:
1862 - Conc. 5, Lot S1/2 4, yeoman
1863 - Conc. 5, Lot S1/2 4, yeoman
1864 - Lot 4, Conc. 5, h (household), Total Value of Real Property: 650, yeoman
1868 - Conc. 5, Lot 12 & 13, yeoman
Appears on Beverly Twp. Assesment Rolls:
1862 - yeoman, householder, Age: 34, Owners: David Davis Senior, School Section: 9, Conc. 5, Lot: N pt. S1/2 4, 50 acres, Total Value of Real Property: 650, Total Value of Personal Property: 62, Total Value of Real & Personal Property: 712
1863 - yeoman, householder, 36, David Davis Senior, SS: 9, Lot: Conc. 5, N pt. S1/2 4, 50 acres, TVRP: 650, TVPP: 92, TVR&PP: 742
1864 - yeoman, householder, 37, David Davis, SS: 9, Conc. 5, Lot: N pt. S1/2 4, 50 acres, TVRP: 650, TVPP: 100, TVR&PP: 750
1865 - carpenter, householder, 39, SS: 10, Conc. 5, Lot: illeg., 1/2 acre, TVRP: 20, TVPP: 100, TVR&PP: 120
1866 - carpenter, householder, 40, SS: 10, Conc. 5, Lot: 6, 1/2 acre, TVRP: 20, TVPP: 50, TVR&PP: 70
1867 - carpenter, tenant, 61, SS: 10, Conc. 5, Lot: 6, illeg...
1868 - yeoman, freeholder, 42, SS; 8, Conc. 5, Lot: 13, 45 acres, TVRP: 330
1869 - freeholder,
(1) SS; 8, Conc. 5, Lot: 13, 43 acres, VRP: 325
(2) SS: 11, Conc. 5, Lot 12, 84 acres, 15 acres cleared, VRP: 630, TVRP: 955
1871 - (Dale, Mrs.),
(1) SS; 8, Conc. 5, Lot: 13, 43 acres, 10 acres cleared, VRP: 325
(2) SS: 11, Conc. 5, Lot 12, 84 acres, 15 acres cleared, VRP: 630, TVRP: 955, TVPP: 92, TVR&PP: 1047 | Andrew Dale
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1901 Census Record: ONTARIO, LAMBTON (East/Est), Bosanquet, c-1, p. 1
Age: 14
Religion: Baptist
Address: Con. 3 Lot 1 | Andrew Ernest Dale
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"...the family moved to Bosanquet township near Arkona, Ontario in 1897 where Arthur took up farming. His previous work had been as a foundry man.
Arthur, Mary and dughter Bessie, left, Ontario in 1911 for the Canadian West, following the footsteps of Ern and Florence. Arthur stopped to work at Carberry for the harvest season while Mary and BEssie went on to Ern's at Hamiota. Arthur and Bessie continued on to homestead at Codette, Saskatchewan, but he eventually returned to Manitoba where he died... of peritonitis following a perforated ulcer." - Dales Tales, 1980, p. 5
1901 Census Record: ONTARIO, LAMBTON (East/Est), Bosanquet, c-1, p.1
Age: 48
Religion: Baptist
Profession: Farmer
Earnings from Occupation or Trade: -
Extra Earnings: 24.00
Address: Con. 3 Lot 1 | Arthur Dale
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At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living
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"Brian, third child of Don and Flo was born on January 25, 1960 at Oakville, Ontario. Brian lives just eight miles away from his brother, Don in Mono Mills and works at Douglas Aircraft. He is interested in cars as well." - Dale Tales, 1980, p.34 | Brian William Dale
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At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living
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| 41 |
At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living
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[The following is a transcription of a handwritten document in the possession of Mary B. Dawson. At the top of the first page, someone has added the statement, "Written by Mrs. John Bradbeer six months before her death in Los Angeles, California, Jan 2, 1890." Mrs. John Bradbeer was Bessie (or Elizabeth) Dale. She died in Sep 1890, so the implication is that these notes were written in Jan 1890. The text is copied as exactly as possible; where letters/words cannot be read, they are indicated with elipses or a question mark. A few explanatory insertions of mine are in brackets; parentheses are in the original.]
My Father Richard Dale and Mother Ann West were born in Newbird [Newbald] Yorkshire England it the time of my birth 1816. We lived there till 1820 when we moved to America. In Nov 1819 my Father came to Cobourg Canada and my mother came in June 1820 with four children, Mary, Joseph, Bessie (myself) and David aged eighteen months. We came across the ocean in a sailing vessel and were fourteen weeks on the way. During the voyage we all were very sick with the whooping cough and my Mother feared that my brother Joseph and myself would never live to see my father. We landed at Carrying Place Canada about 18 miles from Cobourg. There was no waiting room or pleasant place to stop and rest us and my mother sat down on a stone and gave us all something for us to eat. Other passengers had landed too and were waiting at the same place but there was not a face familiar to my mother and she began to cry. She had sent word to my Father that the vessel would arrive on that day and she felt sure that he would be faithful to his word and send some one or come himself after us.
We had been there but a short time when my Mother heard a man asking some one if he had seen a woman with four children come off the vessel. She jumped up quick and said "I must be the woman, who sent you." "Richard Dale" replied the man and my Mother felt a very great load lifted from her heart. When we had driven about fifteen miles we met my Father coming to meet us he had walked three miles and how my Dear Mother rejoiced to see him he had remained at home to have a good meal ready for us and had hired a man to go after us who was acquainted with the roads and could manage the horses better than my Father. Shortly
after our arrival Father bought a small farm of 50 acres [someone later changed this to 70 acres] one mile from the village of Cobourg for the sum of 50 pounds or $250[?]. On this farm seven more children were born Jane, Annie, Anthony, Hannah, Andrew, Martha, and Charlotte making eleven in all. Here my Father and Mother lived the remainder of their lives.
In 1837 our house was destroyed by fire. There was one room my father had built for a school room and after our schooldays were over it was used for a store room. Some of the baking was done there as we had a small iron oven built in the chimney. On the 4th of June 1837 we were baking a pigeon pie in that oven. The frost had settled the chimney so that the fire broke out between the bricks and the house was in flames before we knew anything of it. My Father and the boys were away "training". Well do I remember how proud my bro Dave was of his f....
trousers with the red stripes, cap with long white feathers and cutaway coat with gilt buttons. We could of saved every thing only we were so frightened that we did nothing but run and scream fire and left Mother to battle with the fire alone. She saved most of the things down stairs first of all she carried out the drawer that contained Father's deeds and other valuable papers, she carried them out in the field and hid them. Before long the school teacher and some scholars saw the fire and came to help. Many things could not be saved at all. We had bedding piled up stairs from the floor to the ceiling and four feather beds three or four barrels of flour and pork & .... all were lost.
When my father came home the near neighbors were all there and one of them remarked to Father, "I am sorry Mr Dale you have lost your home and so much else too after you have worked so hard for it." Father said, "is my family safe? and when told they were he said, I am rich yet.
We were not destitute, we still had the stock and land and Father had money enough saved to build again. We had a nice new barn and that was soon made comfortable for us to live in for awhile.
When we sat down to supper Mother spoke of the pigeon pie, she ran to the oven and there it was well baked and the crust well blackened we cut it open and found the pigeons all right and we enjoyed eating them.
I had fifty cents which had been given me and I had it hid safely away. I ran and looked among the ruins but could not find it and when I mourned over my loss Mother said "that is just the way of a miser."
The new house was soon built and was much more convenient than the other still we never thought it was quite as nice as the other one. We did not like the hard mattresses but our feather beds were gone. Mother said it was worse for me because she could not give me what she wished when I was married which occurred shortly after this. Many of the bed clothes and a feather bed were to of been mine.
John Bradbeer was born in Taunton Somersetshire England in 1809 and came to America when he was 18 years old. In 1832 when the cholera was raging he came from lower Canada to his Brother's home in Cobourg and in 1838 we were married.
We lived about one mile from my old house three or four years while my husband worked at his trade (carpenter). Then he bought a farm half a mile from my fathers there we lived until 1861. We were happy and were prospered while there until through misrepresentations of a lawyer we made a trade of that farm for one in Codrington Brighton township and moved there with our ten children. Seven boys and three girls Joseph, James, John, Jane, Libbie [Elizabeth], Andrew, Richard, West [William West], George and Emma then just one month old. All have been good children kind and good to their parents.
We were very much disappointed in the farm at C. We moved there in the winter and after the snow melted we found the ground covered with stones so large they looked almost like sheep.
We succeeded in trading that farm for a nicer one near by ................... Moved to Farwell Clare Co Mich at which place my husband died in 1879 in the month of May at the age of 71 [?] years six of his children being present at that time. [John Bradbeer actually died just across the county line from Farwell, in Isabella County.]
I am at Los Angeles at my sons at the present time, two other sons and one daughter are here. | Elizabeth Dale
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1901 Census Record: ONTARIO, LAMBTON (East/Est), Bosanquet, c-1, p. 1
Age: 13
Religion: Baptist
Address: Con. 3 Lot 1 | Elizabeth (Bessie) Dale
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1901 Census Record: ONTARIO, LAMBTON (East/Est), Bosanquet, c-1, p. 1
Age: 8
Religion: Baptist
Address: Con. 3 Lot 1 | Florence Annie Dale
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1901 Census Record: ONTARIO, WENTWORTH & BRANT (North/Nord), Beverly, b-5, p.8
Religion: Methodist
Profession: Carpenter
Earnings from Occupation or Trade: 600
Address: Con. 6 Lot 7 | Frank Dale
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At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living
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| 47 |
At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living
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1901 Census
http://automatedgenealogy.com/census/DisplayHousehold.jsp?sdid=7872&household=89 | James Dale
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1901 Census Record: ONTARIO, WENTWORTH & BRANT (North/Nord), Beverly, b-5, p.8
Religion: Methodist
Profession: Carpenter
Earnings from Occupation or Trade: 200
Address: Con. 6 Lot 7 | James Dale
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At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living
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