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THE FULLER HISTORY
1832-3964 Canada
Background in Bugland:
We read. of Robert Fuller and Eliza Chappell from their tombstones
in the Brougham Cemetery. They were born in Kept County, England.
During their lives in Canada, they talked of Sevenoaks and Tunbridge
Sells. Robert is said to have made one brief Visit to his old home
county of England in later life.
We quote without any real authority the suggestion that Robert was
a gardener and his very youthful wife belonged to a high social
position in England. In 1832 when they came to a atop at Toronto
to face a new life, Eliza was just 17. She gave birth on the 9th of
August to her first of three sons andnamed him James Chappell Fuller.
That made the comber three; today it has passed the 700 mark.
Further evidence that they kept touch with relatives back home,
ewes from a letter from my grandfather's papers and handed on to me by
my father. This letter was
addressed t "Robert' and opened with "Dear
uncle". The lady writing, Ann Baeyer, was
asking her uncle if a of
her might be permitted t e to him aehena planning t emigrate
to Canada. This letter dated 1657 told of the ar iter Icing a widow;
her am was married and she calls him aeady man with a family. She
had obtained the address to write to from "Mrs. Fuller's father" who
has been 111 and the letter says but is quite better again. She was
writing from Crowborough, Sussex, a Gaud same "7 miles from 'Tunbridge Wella.
Actually the boundary line between Rent and Sussex passes through
a part of Tunbridge Wells. This writerspent a couple of days at Crow-
borough s records.
searching r ords. "Roareras a surname cam up but no evidence
of one named "Ann".
Fuller in a name met with frequently In those parts. I've talked
with them in Sevenoaks and in Crowborough a Mr. and Mre. Fuller asked
me in to tea. This couple directed me to the Village of Lamberhurab a
the spot Mere one finds, the highest concentration of Fullers. We vent
there and weable to find same 30 Fullcr's in the parish voters'
list stuck up in the south pooch of the church., the usual place of post-
ing such a list in England. my letter to the rector brought the reply
that the register bore nothing of Rupert's beginnings, Eliza's, max of
their marriage around 1831. Many Fuller's are recorded on stones in the
burying ground.
My searches were
m
aided with the a negative results studying
the pariah registers as I did at Tunbridge Wells; Tonbridge; Sevenoaks,
Front, Speldhurst Rr uchley and Crowborough. Some younger member of the
family may enjoy carrying on this search. 16 was ascertained that
BICKERING PUBLIC LIBRARY
rI . CENTRAL BRANCH
-2 -
compulsory registration of births etc, began only in 1831. Somerset
Mouse by Waterloo Bridge in London where 1 made two
visits permitted
T
e to go through on parochial" records with the sent interesting
effort and negative results.
This writer hag i early snapshot taken In 1951 of a gravestone
1n the parish church to Sevenoaks. Kent, England. At the bottom is
James Chapple, at the top, Heater, Ms first wife, than s daughter
of Ann and James Chapple, then Ann, the second wife. The spelling
is Chapple in all Instances. I found go entry in the perish register
for these several iabemmnto but all fall within the five decades
fallowing 1810. These could have been Prances Eliza's people.
Toronto 1831 (York until 1834)
This 1832 was
a cholera year an the immigrant ships and In
settlements; o ofr
the very bad years. Many immigrants were passing
through Toronto. He have the ataxy from letters to Ireland published
in a book at Dublin, of several related Irish families arriving there
and proceeding on to Delaware and Adelaide to their farm. Their
baby girl been in August in Toronto died within a few days there. The
w people felt the heat was oppressive, Ilv ins primitive, food very
plentiful and the earlier residents helpful and friendly.
It 1s reported that Eliza contracted cholera but recovered and
gave birth to a healthy baby boy. He wag barn near the present St.
Lawrence Market. Replies to my letters and searches around Anglican
churches of the time gave no account of this baby's arrival or baptism.
Downtown churches of the period have all been horned to the ground
along with their records. Robert Fuller's sedition was not to go into
the wild$ and get free land as moat were
nxfoue to da. He moved bis
little family to the settled lands of Pickering Township, out the
Kingston Bald game 25 miles then north to Brougham the township centre.
We find him in 1831 located on the 5tb Concession, no doubt on
farm he ranged. He was an Englishmen and found himself in the midst
of a rabid squabble over the proper way Upper Canada should be governed.
His neigbbours were
ranged on the two sides of the question. Many were
refovmers known to have guns, boasting of their plans to use force to
overthrow the Family Compact in York. The rebellion flared into flame
in December of 1031. Many had time to rush to Yonge, Street to be
involved with Mclenzie in the skirmish at Montgomery's It proved a
finale. Magistrates and the militia had orders to attest those in-
volved.
My uncle Ed Willson got this from his father. 'That 'Old Puller-
s down the 5th with s detachment of the Militia and pointed out
Which of the nefghboura should be arrested. Milleon's, Linton'sand
others being picked up, the group entered the Tavern at Thompson's.
FRANCES ELRABUH CHAPPUL NLLM, Him Wife
Own lent, En010edr Burled
Bm,ghem, OnNno
1916-10]6
1906-IR95
2nd Wife of Rol erl Fuller
Gmndmolher Yo Al
Miaouri Plhering-Mismuri
-3 -
Toronto 1832 (York until 1634)
After the lapse of name time, it was realized that all had chores t
do and molecule to feed at home. The result; all went off M1ome and the
incident was
ended" With notable exceptions, meat who took pert
againat thegovernment were finallyallowed to so
free. Caspar aiw
Edward's and Maria's father, w e
auction er escaped
suspicion . His father, Asher, w wail
In jail for a time at Toronto. He
faced trial charged with others with High Treason: was acquitted and
allowed to go his way. Maria carried James Chappell Fuller in 1856
and so united the two families along with the Hubbard'a as our ancestral
basis.
Parmin¢ in pdckerin
Robert Fuller in 1852 bought Parra Lot number 22, (South 100 Sores)
4th Concession where they lived until retiring, where a log house they
occupied Still stands, bhe log construction welt concealed by stucco
and board aiding. He gave Spree at the comer on the 4th Road for a
Sunday School. A building for the purpose was put up there but had
been moved away. Thin writer visited the old farm first in 1940 along
with the Missouri cousins
s of my father; Eliza Harlan and James Enlist.
Eliza said she was been in a woull house "aver there in the orchard".
name two, Eliza Harlan and James Puller vent with me to sea
their old township of Pickering after 60 years, in the sur of
m1940.
These me had made their home with Robert and their grandmother Eliza
in 1075. The grandparents left the farm in 1976 and had a house built
in Erougham where they retired but Eliza died before the year ended.
Some time later their Grandpa, Robert, married Mrs. Mary Stang and all'
zed to her farm north of Weston. Me young people lived there long
enough to be remembered by contemporaries after 60 years. Eliza was
the friend of an ardent young can who mances all the way frm Missouri.
May w ied at the West" farm home in the spring of 1880 and
James Fuller accompanied his sister back to Missouri.
In 1940 after just 60 years we found the old house and were
allowed to go over it. Further we located a won well advanced in
years, James Hower, who remembered both of them as did his wife. He
and James bad attended the circus together in Toronto.
Talking of their grandfather, Robert, James acid, he was very fond
of bread and milk. As s lad he had imbibed more than enough of this
one item of diet. In his earlier years Robert was taken to curt,
charged end convicted of Striking the toll -gate keeper on OM Kingston
Road. Here early mrruing forams going to Toronto passed free but
paid ten users an the return trip. Fuller had gone in by Markham and
proffered the regular toll of a nickel. In the argument the nickel
was in the dusty road and the official won punched in the nose.
JAMES HENRY FULLER
JAMES HENRY FULLER end Hix Sinn
1861-1915 ELIZA FRANCES FULLER MARIAN
B mvgFam-Mismmi Aha uJ 1870o m ving
Oom C'I
1868-J874
EFFIE MAY FULLER
Son of Hmry Fulln Intl
18]118]4 Minimi
MOI Ann Elliott
Douglvm of Hlnry Intl
Minoun
M,I Ann FEWN,
Farming in Picker in
Eliza told of going to Tamura with eGrandpan" to sell over 100 pounds
of butter she had made, from which she purchased a nice new coat
unleased with fur, and material for a dress. growing, Stong Fuller,
Eliza said, was not an unkind woman but the careful, frugal type who
wasted nothing
The interesting house in Brough® built for the couple's period
of retirement which seems to have lasted lees than a year until
Eliza died, is still standing in it's acre of well -kept grounds and
flowers. It isof frame with upstairs bedroom space. There is a
barn raised tos seconJ storey onatone fauudatian: apace for horse
and c well as poultry. Any of the family interested can have
look at this attractive home on the street south of No. ] Highway,
parallel to it.
Same -time after his wife's death, Robert married Mrs. Mary Stang
and lived on her farm until his death in July 1887. My dad, the
and Robert. told m about his grandfather's funeral when they drove
in buggies an a hot July 5th £tom Wastes to Brougham for the burial.
Mary Stang Fuller know to W father's generation as Grandmother
York, lived for same years after her husband. She was buried beside
George Stang, her first husband. Their gravestone ablock north of
their farm has on the two Bides the aware Stang; Puller. The farm
buildings'bave been gobbled up in the ea of road systems which have
me into theta a in the past tan years. The Stang family knew this
lady as Aunt Pally Fuller,
Jame Chappell Puller end Merin Willson
Me wee baby boy born August nth, 1832 was the beginning point
of the n rs Fuller's of today. He was named Jorge Chappell; was
educated in Pickering township and wearied there Maris, daughter of
Caspar Willson and Elizabeth Hubbard in 1856.
James was grow up when his father acquired him Lot 22, 4CT
Concession Previous to that date they farmed on arious rented
locations. James and Marie appear to have been tenauta b several
fame. May owed and lived on the 50 ac r 50 of the S. 1/2
of Lot 22, Concession 3. Nervy, James's youngest brother with his
family lived on thegouth 50 adjoining. Thin was pine Land, very
sandy and poor crop land. On these fame there remain the caller and
foundations of both house and barn. It has been said that the barn
along with the work horses were destroyed in a £ite.during seeding
time while the men were at their noon dinner. Me children attended
the Brock Road School on the 4th. Moving from this farm which war
ELIZA FRANCES FULLER
IB60-1955
GEORGE WASHINGTON HARLAN
(Her Hu56on61
1051-1939
SARAH FRANCES FULLER IDAISYI
10M-1935
WILLIAM SANDERSON
he, hu,baM
18561938
WIWAM HENRY FULLER MARGARET ANN MURDOCK (HE Wile]
(About 1918) IAb,019101
1858-1938 1850-1951
- 5 -
jams Chamell Eviler and Marfa Willson
later sold, they rental on the 6th and the children attended
Bronghem School from which the son, Robert "graduated' 1u 1069. There
e to he a record of the £acme they occupied from 1856 to 1800 but
forthelast years in Pickering they lived at the top of the hill an
the Jth toward Clar sent, half a mile from the BarClay'e and near John
Miller's.
The Willson Fam11
Maria Willson daughter Of Caspar came from a quite prolific
family of Willson's. Asher, father of Caspar, cam to the township
from the J. S. in 1815. His wife Vag Susanne Stotts. They raised
12 children from whom large families separated widely over
the
ancient and made their mark upon communities whereverthey went.
Many of them wtcharacterized by det owinatiom and a strong religious
ben u
Thos we here s youngsters had family worship very strictly
adhered to. where were many many of than stalwarts in Sunday School
work and the temperance movement. Asher, identified himself with the
reform movement led by Mckenzie as did so many Pickering men including
the Rev. George Barclay and his sone. Asher Willson passed some time
in the jail at Toronto.
Andrew Hubbard, father to Elizabeth who became the wife of
Caspar Willson we in the York Militia in the War of 1812. His
father, Thomas Hubbard; both of their graves a the entrance a.
Brougham Courtesy; received distinguished mention first a member
of the District Council, then in 1811 for being the first township
clerk of Pickering when it became a township. He was honoured both at
the Pickering Centennial celebrations of 1911 and again in 1961 when the
150th Anniversary was observed. Se this latter occasion the old public
school was dedicated as Township Museum.
Among the meat distinguished of the Hubbard live might be mentioned
Hamar (Hou) Crocheted, who became lord Greenwood through service in
the political field in England. His sister, Birdie-Greemmod, became
Bon. Mrs. L. Amery and is still living in London, England with her eon
Julian, who isa Present day Cabinet Minister. The letter young use
Is married toa daughter of Harold Macnillm.
Mitchell and Logan
In 1880, the James C. Puller family Wiled up stakes in the
Broughmn region and mved to Logan Township where James had purchased
the fine farm from John Busch, Lot 5, Concession 2, Logan. "The house
was a lag me and a large frame addition was added. Pere Maria Willson
Puller established a Sunday School. Within a few years a new house of
white brick was built. Many of us as children attended Sunday School
first in the acv Muse than in the old one. For about 1908, James and
TIE IAMB CHAPffLL FULLER FAMILY AIOUL 1880
Mot)
NM A.) RESERVE MILLER, I eA.19Br JAMES p49ELLYIll 18311920 MALA WILLSON FULLER, NO.1923i ROLL FALSE, 1550.1926.
ISn3..l MAMA MAMA BARCLAY. RWW � RLIMAE, 1662 WAR; ELLA FULLIER. 3866-19V,
PAIRS FULLER, IE69.1900, JOHN SELL. HAMW el ME Foliar. MUSLI940
1864-1946 IQ
THOMAS FERI
HMIN,nd of Elio FROM,
JOHN FORSM
Hvaband of M,, olel Fuller
1675-19A6
WILLIAM SMNFMAN, 1900
H, bowl of All I Polo
1871-1947
Mitchell and Logen
Merin moved to Mitchell and their son, Edwardes familymoved from the
older house to the big house. From than on the older house was kept
up for many, =my years to accommodate the Sunday School. James
kept his own Horan In the town as they were
still able to make many
tripe. It was at the Mitchell house that the family had their first
summer gathering in 1906 an August 9th, to commemorate the birthday
of James Chappell looking back to L832. Free that beginning with out
failure the Fuller Abandon has been held ever since; new approaching
the 59th reunion next June 28th. James and Maria are buried at
Mitchell.
William Fuller 1E34-1865 and Emma Compton 1829-1921
The second nor of Robert and Eliza Fuller was born to Pickering.
He =tried quite young and is known to have lived in the village of
Brougham. He died at the age of 31 and the stone oer his grave is
beside those of his parents who survived him by manyyears.
His wife, Emoa Compton, was left with two small children, Sarah
Frances who has ewe down the yea 'Daisy^ born in 1860 and
William Mom we always distinguished as 'Dakota Bill'. This writer
met "Aunt Rmnaw at her s x Swift Current, Bask. on visit
there in 1919. Ky father, Pobext visited the family in Dakota
where they had moved from Brougham. She had been aeand time
widowed many, many years earlier. Her second husband was a Churchill.
Harv^ Fuller 1837 and Margaret Ann Elliott 1840-1875
This was the youngest son and child of the marriage of Rehert
and Eliza. He married Margaret Ann Elliott. Their first child
Eliza Frances was be= as she said; in a wall two -room house over
in the east orchard an Grandpa's farm on Lot 22.
Shortly after Eliza was born, they moved to the sandy fifty
acres 8 L/2 of the S., loo acres of Lot 22, Concession 3. Up to 1940
when we visited the old farm there remained foundation and basement
of the house and Lark; all since obliterated is a huge gravel
exrevat inn. Eliza x called a mall creak behind the barn tracing its
way a the Third, Jams Henry was Into there. Elizarcelled
attending Me Brock Road School. They burned lime on thisfare
In 1870 this enterprising couple following the Palmors, Margaret
Ann's sister and her husband William pulled up stakes and moved to
the edge of the prairie country in the state of Missouri. The Henry
Fuller's had a third Child, Edmund Joy. Another baby Effie May was
born in the United States. Illness carried
ied away the Me youngest
children in 1874. A year latex the two eldest were Left alone When
William and Margaret Ann died within a few days of each other. James
ROBERT MILLER FULLER
1W4- Xilmm, r
.food e�tack.l LE wITErdly of rOFOMLa. He Tweed tw be (to
10 o leader Ciao Lad Other A No AtIA4 LA 1934.
lalerteet' r& Out '.at 11 .4 A FFI.T. bred Able ada.dwr
Re 401TIcc to Fe.l. we. A.lk A. Comedies Field Arlllkdfy.
'ke, died to 933LFMMiM� a trip to STAFF
'Tiodw "I Life V.1 I. I..' doll 1.1 Trip ek,
,Fall total a Fall ..It All ad. .. ITT Tilde ALL ITA,
am Cut farm Feel Swift Cutrut Fla. 0. FIT ALI head At.
lot war trip add four jusegarmt Term. IF IT5,19I6 add
&SAM 1. 1939 be IC&FC%Cd the AAUK7FYJLd& aVQfCk49 add made
&too Sell ltK94% What. WAIT tML.F.41L.S vie quite w,koev
otalt F& Located cI%Eck ocGzdm A' .'A F.111.11 '.,I Of tilbcK
tie Mae ffMSAA&iIMK IIFJ4 WELL TO 2MOOIr
tkk bill wltlC%laIl .1 we.L4 ..d Flea I* At 16 %Raw their
- ] -
Henry Puller LB]] and Merearet Ann Elliott 1840-1875
C. tient to Missouri via Minneapolis to bring back his brother's
children to a home under their grandfather's roof an farm Lot 22 on
the Ara. James brought back Henry's gun, a double barrelled mzzle-
bodding shot gun which is now in the Brougham Museum. My father met
the returning party at Markham. Eliza and Jams went to live with
their grandparents on Lot 22 on the 4th.
when I took them beck there in 1940, it was really a live
history leaeon for we and a delight, I'm sure, to Eliza's two daughters
whovr before had been to the s of their mother's early years
ort of which she had related than so much of her far away folks.
The new house was built for years of retirement in Brougham but
Pranced Eliza didd before the year was not. I have norand ae to the
lapse of time until Robert remarried. His new wife was Mrs Mary Stung
living on her awn farm to which they moved earth of Weston, from Which
Eliza left with Ceerge Harlan her new husband back to Missouri; Jams
accompanying them.
Frances Eliza Fuller Harlan 1860-1955
As we toured Pickering with this dear lady in 1940, she told
us of theencs of seventy -add yegreca
before. She s born In the
Township o4 her grarLps's farm. Her father was born within a mile or
sam c
of the same place. We cannot locate the birth place of Margaret
Ann Elliott, her =they When Eliza was ten the trip we made to
MLeouri. Margaret Am's sister with her husband William Palmer had been
rn the state fore a time. The Fuller's bought their first face from
Uncle William Palmer. This land it in Randolph County and the Palmer
descendents an
atilt o their old farm. The migrant family firm
Pickering c cam by train via Minneapolis and Vern
aetcattMacon, .Mo. by
Nncle William^. Their fare was prairie land and their poet office
as Clifton He. The family joined the Cumberland Presbyterian Church
so reed from the southern of settlers from the Cumberland Mountain
area of Tennessee.
Two more babies were
added to the family bat pioneer conditions
took their toll as both of these died in 1074 and a year later both
Henry and Margaret Ann died within a week.
Uncle Jams came all the way from Pickering to bring her bank
to relatives who extended care and love to Eliza and Jame her brother.
Eliza was fifteen and quite co nscious of all the changes of fortune
so suddenly thrust upon them.May fated a good home with their grand-
parents. It has been abid that the ma other cousins bereaved of their
father also lived part of the time with the grandparents. They were
Sarah Frances known always as Daisy and William a brother two years her
senior.
-0 -
Frances Flits Puller Harlan 1860-1955
Gvacnpa Robert Fuller built the balsa in Brougham to which they -
moved. Then within aouple of years, a step -grandmother had came
Seco the picY,rn; Mary Stang Puller. They lived the rem lning few
years of their life. in Canada at her farm home near Weston. It meet
have been this "grandmother- who urged Eliza to stay safely in Canada
and never think of returning to Missouri because of the prevalence of
snakes.
However lettere came from Missouri: v mention of "Snakes" -
expect. Men the prospective bridegroom arrived in the person of
George Washington Harlan. They were
married at the Weston home. WE
father w at that maddest, so he told me arriving at a nearby flag -
station by train, the few miles it= Westo
Elis did not encounter the snakes which had been used to frighten
her. They s up a afarm where they raised a family of two sons and
four daughters who reached maturity. Henry Harlan the son. and his 4
sisters are still living near their place of birth: all with families
of their out and grendchiliraa.
James Henry Fuller 1861-1945
This Jame Harry,
after his Uncle James and his own father, Hey,
spent his first 9years to Pickett" on the farm where he was hare,
Lot 22, Con. J, south 50 acres. He lease school at the Brock Read
School with a 2 1/4 mile walk there with his sister and the causing
Robert, Ida and Edward.
The fifty acres from present appearances east have been a very
poor farm Investment It could have been pine land to begin with. From
this writer's first observation of It, there have not been fences o
sign of a plough. Some apple trees
and small shrubs second the vestiges
of foundation and basement bear evidence of planning and Cara that
make but a poor showing now.
James cam back when he had reached nearly 14 and mut have helped
1n ordinary farm work. Me decision ve6 his to accompaoy the newly
wed Harlan's back to Missouri. After all they still had an aunt there;
a sister of their own mother.
James lived in Moberley, Missouri, carried but the union was never
blessed with children. We met him first in 1959 near his home edema
we visited there. He was
sn
mild kindly ma with anowy heir of a nature
ieilar to his Uncle Jams whom many of us knew so well. His trip to
Canada after just 60 years in 1940, this Writer found eery interesting..
James expected to £Sad nothing in buildings and people of what he had
left in I880. At Grandpa's old farm he looked into the stable and
James Beery Fuller 1861-1945
said' ^Same old Stalls". Out of Weston he expressed the conviction
that there would be no sign of the aid house. we c mall
hill and there it v small frame house in need of paint where a
very kindly English woman tenant asked us in and showed us around.
The b, was gone. Men we found JMP Hoover.Both old friends
remembered a trip to Toronto with other young fellows to the circus
n .
We saw Niagara Fall$ under lights i colour. Uncle Jim didn't think
the falls looked anything special,
lames Henry had a bad momeot or two re-entering the States at
Detroit in early July 1940- Newpassport regulations had come into
force during their five days in Canada. games had no proof and no
clear idea whether his parents had fulfilled all the new sed fancy
regulations which were the outcropping of 60 years of officialdom.
However, an experienced, sympathetic Imeietacion Officer cleared the
matter up in a minute. We greatly enjoyed our few days association
with this exellent man.
Wi114mm Henry Fuller (Dakota Bill) 1858-1928
Parente of two children: rtkre lived in Brougham. it is recorded
they owned a house there. What work the father was Is is net known.
He died aged 31 and for years his widow armed Compton Fuller lived in
aa
mall house there. William would be Just seven at his father's death.
Regrew up in Brougham and married [here, thedaughter of a shoemaker
from Scotland, Margaret Murdock barn at New Deer In from Peterhead,
Aberdeenshire.
Two daughters and a son must have been born there for William, the
third child has cold me he was born in Brougham. Then they left and
took land in the prairie country of North Dakota. Have three ear
sets and two daughters were barn. Thee about 1910 they sold out and
began farming south of Swift Current in Saekatchewan. May Experienced
the ups and downs of that unduly dry section of the Prairie Land.
Within a few years they had tragic deaths from accident and disease
which carried off 5 of the family and a son-in-law.
Members of my family who visited at this have felt aarmth of
welcome and kindliness not often ancelled. The Scats Lady, Mararet
Murdock did acts of kindly hospitality from al im [
resources, acts which
Dever,
could be forgotten. We called during ED evening In 1939
when tile ver farms jus[ creeping out of the bitter times. This lovely
little lady gave us the potatoes which she had peeled for the morrow s
dinner, along with a loaf of bread and small trinkets. To refuse this
kindness w of the question. fames, the s we chief farmer at
that stege{ William still living in Swift Current Depressed the young
fry present with his great display of Indian arrow heads and his armoury
10 -
William. HenryFuller (Dakota Bill` 1658-1928
of guns; kept i:, a small closet all nicely oiled and all loadei.
Margaret kntdock Fuller's life say fca:urad in pmvi?cial papers i
1949. She was 99, a- again be June 1951 when net death occurred at 100
and sore saver months
Sarah Frances potter Sanderson 1860-1935 "Beisy"
A sister of Dakota William, Sarah Frances spent her only years in
as
Br ,ghsm. Sher t have a ended the village sliest Ulrich mw is the
Township Museum. She was
- of three girl c veins born it 1860. Ids'
the second child of her uncle James Polley and Frances Slide in the 'n my
Pullen family. She carried quite young for her eldest so n Ffaek was born
when she ads but 18. Her husband waa William Sanderson.
They lived clause their whole lives in Pickering village except for
a period to the Canadian West of
about ten years, Five s and five
daughters of this union grew tomaturity, mot st o£ them to see children in
responsible positions with healthy grandchildren. One daughter, Eva
lives at New Wwstministvr B.C.; Albeit with ten
children a numerous
grandchildren lives 11 Mtnn=saea. George who had been rxised[ manhood
in :he hose of his mother's leads, Jams Puller near Mitchell, went cast and
during the period 1914u have dropped entirely from the ken of
all his out people. Throtdersasvariously located not far from Toronto.
It has been a great personal satisfaction for this writer to have made
contact with the Sefderann branch of the family and to find them a ua
lightful and Interesting group.
Robert Fuller 1857-1944 and Read Maria Barclay 1862-1928 (My parents)
Them first grandchild of the English Robert Had ar Brougham.
From hiss [
and year they lived on the seedy 50 a the�3rd. Ile
started school at the Brock School but on leaving school At the age of 12,
they lived again on a rental farm near Brougham. At that tender age he
became assistant to theHired mar. dnthe farm.
Through many harvest days he told a of earlier tfaus. lie had helped
when grain w cradled and bound by hand. He had followed the reaper
and always was adept at binding any sheaf the binder had m tying;;
Threshing grain. he saw from days of the flail, then the horse -powered
thresher, the s actior. engine and cylinder thresher right to the
period of the self -feeder and straw blower pn'er,d by s gasoline tractor.
The last Ears operated by the James C. Fuller's in Pickering ads
up the hill on the Claremont Road on the 7th. A close personal friend
u -
Robert F list 1857-1944 d gees Marie Barclay 1062-1930
(My Parente)
at this time s Robert Miller one of the family of the well-known
livestock importer, Jahn Miller whose farm was across the sideroed.
Robert oersted Ewe Maeda, youngest daughter of Eli Barclay, neighbour
across the Rh road.
When the family wok the Sohn Busch farm, Lot 5, 2nd Concession
of Logan, Robert and Essex became termite an a farm half a mile to the
east. TFa great pioneer task of clearing away the trees was still i
progress. Great heaps of tree trunks and branches were piled up during
winter to chose more acres ready for the seed. In late summer great
fires appeared, aftengetting out of hand when live forests and cedar
swamps m
spread danger and terror for miles. Robert and Thnext had
aform in pullartan Township, then into Hibbert where they famed
for 9 years anthe Brooks farm. Theymoved the
heffamily now mmbering
9 children ton
Dennis TowaFlp e mile
from
d.
In his younger years, Robert associated with older men who had
he
and
taken up original
iandthe
regaledforest
us ter thesyears5with Site Of
an theaccomplished
omplish draconteur
lingo which might still be met with in Cotowa11,Yottshire, Devon,
Scotland orIreland connected with farm happenings like washing sheep,
harvesting and at "bees" doing different work. Brom a well as Robert
ender and the habit is very marked fn every One of
their children ride children soon learned that a book from school of
"requi
ad. If he
it yourwaitedt
reading get your
to linkfrominhad finished.[ his nose feta
yon inwhen h
Two events of 1906 and TRUE, were mine of reporting and
discussion. After harvest in 1906, Dad went 'but went" to see the
boys. Herbert and Harry the two eldest bad joined the great trek
West in 1901-2. Dad's trip took him to Dakota to see
cousin Will;
be visited old neighbours the Wintecingham'sp he visited the Bob
Rameay's near the U. S. border and the Bayle's in their hotel at
Port Du'Appelle. Mrs. Boyle wasa Barclay, mother's sister. Ile
visited his own dear sister Ida Bell where they had homesteaded at
Lockwood and had a lengthly stay with the "boys" at their construction
amp near Swift Current. All of this trip was a mine for m%nelleat
conversation for months and months. probably eclipsing everything
else was the wreck of their train north of Sudbury an the trip wear,
when 25 or more were killed. A tre uie kept for years was a poet
and written with pencil up against abrick wall reporting that Mn
f®edfate group were all unhurt and well. _
In September of 1908 Robert wees sees by so s of a neighbour
to come to their gid. dim, the thirdson, s lad of 20 went too. They
12 -
Robert Puller 1857-1944 and Ewa Marta Barclay 1862-1930
(My parents)
with a few others caught and tied rap with a plow line sently
released convict. May verified the fact that the man had murdzred
e poor hclplxss old lady and so handed him o o police. Jim
and his dad were prominent in the subsequent trial and conviction
of the perpetrator of the crime Who received the death penalty.
Robert was permitted by the Sheriff to be present at the execution
rn June 1909.
no Bennie farm was &Even up and the much diminished family
lived at a cottage nearby when the Great War ended. The three
eldest daughters were 1n homes of their car. The years 1917 acd
1918 had been a period of particular anxiety and screw. Arthur
Gordon died suddenly at home be May 1937 and word came in August
that Harry had been killed in action. He served with the Railway
Troops and wen killed by shell fire, He is buried about a mile from
the great Play Memorial in Is Targette Cemetery, very near the village
of Manville St. Vaaaq 5 miles from Arras. James Clifford m ncioned
above served in the P.P.C.L.I. through 1916 and months of 1917 and
1918. He was warded the Military Medal, commissioned then gat the
Military Cross, was mourned and returned to hospital in England.
This writer served 9 months in Prance as Signaller until hereceived
and that sent him also to Ragland before the War ended. In
1919 Robert purchased his £Etat farm, in Ellice Township next to
that of William Coulton, a on -in-law. Emma died there in 1930 and
Robert lived with his daughters Ella and Bessie until his death at
the age of 87 years. He was burled on the 29th February 1964
beside Emco in the Sebringville Cemetery.
Emma named
and Robert s ed to share the ambition for their children
ie providing them with as good an education as could be obtained.
The family were successful i school and learning which all
appreciated. Robert was adherent of the John A. MacDonald school.'
Others might hold views n
a they wished, but those of John A. moat be
considered right and correct.
The Barclay Family (Canada 1816)
One of the prominent families of Pickering was founded an the
arrival from CupeT in Scotland of Rev. George Barclay with Janet his
wife and a numerous family. They left Scotland in 1816 and finally
settled on Lot 19, Com:. 6, Rear 100 acres. Here some of them stilt
live.
Eli and e we born in Canada. Room Maria daughter
to Eli and Mary AnnrHarper, married Robert Fuller in 1879. Her
immediate family included Eliza Barclay Burton, mother of Prof.
13 -
The Barclay Family (Canada 1016)
Franklin Burton and Charles A. Burton of the Robert Simpson
Company; Adelalve, Charles, Jahn, Elizabeth and Bertha Barclay
Runway.
Rev. George Barclay and his wife are buried at Claremont.
He reached a prominent position in the early Baptist Church in
rge and
is wife
Ontario.
ied and their ddescendents have daughters of achieved kJanet
achievedprominencein Canada
ens1n the united States -
Ida
Ida Fuller Bell 1860-1926
Ida, eldest daughter of James G. and Marfa was born near
Brougham. She attended the Brack Road School end
dlater theBalOne at Brougham where she reached me turity and =tried
They lived on a farm west of Brougham where their children were
born, a daughter and four sons who survived the years of infancy.
About the year 1902 they took the course
se of a many young people
of the period and pulled up stakes to pioneer in the Canadian
West. They settled near Lockwood, Saskatchewan, where the two
youngest of the family, Marjorie and Harold still live and from
which two later generations are fanning out to various parts of the
country.
Archie the eldest died unmarried some years ago. Hugh Arlington
prairiesBell Left the Coast
daughters and their families arinall ofathe egfour
three western
provinces. s
Brougham in the last twenty years of the century was a
thriving village containing se s
several hotels, stores, blacksmith
shops, shoemaker'sshops, tailor Shops as well ascarriage
builders, the Township Hall and a large Temperance Nall, god three
churches. It was the centre of excellent farms, more especially
those where imported livestock were bred and distributed; clyde
horses, shorthorna and several types of sheep. Teaming grain to
the Front vasawinter occupation from townships farther north
down the Brock Road it= Which it was ehippped. Brougham would be
crowded with sleighs about the hotels while horses were fed and
rested over the noon hour and all through winter nights.
Ida Fuller Bell was of alight build in earlier years. III
health seemed to have been her leo in the West. Later, the dread
arthritis left her with badly crippled hands, Mough she were
a good number of lettere and carried on her house work in a wheel
chair. Always she had been and continued to the end of her life
of a happy, sonny disposition.
14 -
Edward Charles puller 1863-19N
Third child to James C. and Maria. Edward Charles must have
been born in the Brougham region of Pickering. He left school for
the farm as boys of the time were
expected to do at 14 a When
the family moved to Logan he was fully grown and considered acry'
able worker. When the now white brick house Was built, Edwardwith
his young family lived in the log dwelling to which bad been
added a two-storey frame kitchay.
He had married Elizabeth Winteringham, daughter of the nearest
est
r
family across the side -road. When James C. retired to Mitchell the
son moved lito the brick house and the former home was kept for
years for use as a Sunday School.
The union was blessed with children. William James, eldest,
graduated from model school into the ieaching profession but mesa
left it t Ludy dentidtry . He
aw very able practitioier
in New Liskeard. Four little girls died to their early tender year&
and two daughters and three additional sons grew to adult years.
Edward was known to be hard working and an excellent farmer.
His farm produced splendid cattle. %Its he was a shroud and
hard bargainer in a "deal" he was kindly and soft hearted in a1L
family dealings. His retirement was on his nor farm when the farm
management was taken o n
r by the third youngest son, Clifford Warren
Fuller whose untimely death occurred 1n 1961 after climb the farm
was sold.
Ella Fuller Ferguson 1866-1957
This second daughter of James C. and Maria grew to adulthood
n Logan and married a young ran living in Nozzle, Thomas
Ferguson. They were Presbyterian and attended the church at Avon,
bank Where both axe buried in the cemetery. Here are laid away
any of the earlier settlers practically all of Scots parentage.
Ferguson's were
a family of great respectability and of quiet
habits. Two sons and two daughters made up this family, all of whom
still survive along with numerous healthy children and grandchildren.
Ella Ferguson survived all of bar generation covered in this
history. She was arried Good Friday in 1957 by the aide of
Thomas who had proceeded her in 1941. They were known a Very
amiable couple genuinely respected through the whole of their
long lives.
Margaret Fuller Forsyth 1073-1934
She was
child of a when the family moved to Lagan near
Mitchell. She had been afflicted at an early age with pneumonia
13 -
Margaret Fuller Forsyth 1073-1934
which left her in goad enough health but deprived of hearing. She
was rolled at the Ontario School for the Deaf at Belleville,
Ontario and advanced quite well in that institution. She wrote
good and interesting letters all her life. Often an odd phrase from
her writing was quoted, a phrase with an unusual turn due to her
unfamiliarity with speech. She read books and lived quite a normal
happy life.
In her middle thirties she met and married John Forsyth, an
early victim of scarlet fever that left him totally without hearing.
He was expert in the trade of an upholsterer and in finishing
furniture. He was born in Gornall Onterlo. We knew him as, a very
affable, extremely clever man skilled to se forms of sleight-of-
hand. He exhibited interesting tricks so children. For many gears
he operated a aide line as semi -profess tonal photographer.
Margaret in bar earlier years and later the Forsyth family
met and knew may other deaf people; the Roy's of Dupuis; Quinlan
of Stratford. May met 1n considerable numbers and were
able to
communicate with each other with very great eujoymentindeed.
Their one child, Marie Ethel Forsyth, born in. 1914 had to learn
speech living with her grandparents, the James Fuller's. She had
an early aptitude for learning speech and in fact had distinct
connote from Class, to time as she associated with children of English,
Scotch or Defvan environment. She was skilled to a marked degree
in knowing what her parents told her by signs and in interpreting
their wishes to others long before she could read or use a hand
alphabet.
The Forsyth's never learned lip reading but besides signs they
devised for their o , they spelled o words with a e -band
or e two -hand alphabet. [
Most of the aunts and senator who
associated often with Margaret following her school years became
quite efficient in "talking on their hands" with her. Much of course,
had to be Wilson.
John Forsyth Naemployed in Mitchell, then in a furniture
plant 1n Stratford, later in Elmira. At Margaret's death she was
buried with her parents In Mitchell; John Forsyth at hie demise
as, buried in the Elmira centenary where the only daughter Mon.
(Marie) Clifford Denham res idea. They have a son and daughter,
the latter a teacher in Families.
Alberta Eliza Fuller Stoneman 1074-190'a�
Thin youngest child of the James C. Fuller family was quite
small when the family came to Tempo township. Her education was
16 -
Alberta Eliza Fuller Stoneman 1874-19W
at the local school and in Hitehall`High School. She met and
worried William Stoneman. They lived for a time at Richton where
William wag clerk in a store.
Shortly after 1900, Jesse C. and Maria had moved to their
well-known frame house n the main street is Mitchell where they
had a large fenced yard to the east. On this extra lot a fine
sea brick house was built where the increasing Stoneman family
lived. A barn still on the back of the lot was for sew, horse
and. poultry.
William Stoneman set
up a of the leading business me
of the Lawn in the line of groceries and fine crockery occupying
the best site to town. The family for years kept e cow and a Horse.
One daughter caw as a beginning then sons followed seven of them
in the next dozen yeern interval of 6 yearc
s then a and
daughter. Gordon theyoungest enlisted early in 1940 andserved
with the Perth's in England, Sicily, Italy and Western Europe be-
fore returning in 1945. His elder brother Edward joined the
Canadian Army and served in England, France and Germany. William
Junior fitted himself for Veterinarian in the college at Guelph.
Others of the Emily established themselves in commercial and
business positions.
Alberta Elise was a very efficient and handsome woman. The
family were known to relatives and to the town as a splendid,
public spirited amiable group. The parents in declining years were
well cared for by Myra, the eldest daughter, fully supported by
the family to their deaths. Willim and Alberta were lifetime
members 0f the United Church of Mitchell.
1Sy tlN tl30'+tll
Y
}NZ�
iX�co
Pickering Top.
GUR
CRT Concession
9th
Brock Road 6 Brougham
B Barclay Pam
J J C Puller Residence
18]9
P Lot 22 Robert Fuller
Parm
6P He'se. of R. P. 18)6
8th
Robert, Eliza, Nillian,
gra cher e.
U Casper Willson Fares
20 6 21
H Joee :filler Farm
J
N
hh
FOUGL
No. ] Hay.
Bch
To Tor
_ o
BF
l
C
ThoupsoCorners
5tb
-
WaodtoE£
F
Rill
Bro
Road
School
C
4th
23
'1
0
9
8 1] 16
3rd
22
Lot Numbers
Deckers Hill
LER PAMILY T8E8 CC44AM 1832-1964)
1. Robert Fuller _ (1) Frames Elizabeth Chappell
1009-1887 18L6-1076 Fuller
1832-1920
Merle Willson
Robert Fuller Ida Fuller Edward Charles
1857-1944
1060-1926
Puller
M
M
1862-1940
Some Marie
John Charles
M
Barclay
Bell
Elizabeth
1062-1938
1855-1940
W3nterineham
1864-194]
Mrs. Mary Sheffer (Stang) Puller
1834-1865 M 103]-18]5 M
_Emma ComptonMargaret Ann
1029-1921 Elliott
( Churchill) 1840-18]5
26 27 28 29
Frames Elizabeth James Barry Edmund Joy Effie
Fuller Fuller Fuller May
1860-1955 M 1861-1945 M 18]0-18]4 Fuller
1871-18]4
Washington Daily Stacey
Ian 1864-1
Wllllem Henry Sarah Frances
Fuller
Fuller
1858-L920 M
1860-1935 M
Margaret Ano
William
Murdock
Sanderson
1850-1951
1856-1938
Puller Margaret Alberta Eliza
6-1957 Fuller Fuller
as M 1873-1934 1814-1955
M M
-1941 Jahn William
Forsyth Stoneman
1015-1966 18]1-194]
Herbert Barclay Harry Roger Ida Puller
Puller Fuller 1884-
1880- 1882-1931 M
M K.I.A Prance Thomas Mills
Annie Mills 1884-1964
1003-1923
Robert Miller
Ella Eliza
Fuller
Puller
1894-
1896-
1
M
(1) Hannah Erb
Edwin Erb
1895-1955
1894-
(2) Kathleen Kendall
1906-
19
Ida Fuller
James Hugh Arlington Hell
11 1884-
883 M
Rhoda Alice Copland
1890 -
Laura Louise
James Clifford Bessie Evelyn
Fuller
Buster Fuller
1886-
1888-1960 1891-
M
M M
William Richard
(1) Marion George Gibb
Coulton
Ready 1886-
1880-1960
1891-1940 "
(2) Jean Armstrong
1905-1950
(3) Anna Montgomery
Body
rthur Gorden Winifred Marjorie Edward Dulles
Fuller Fuller
Fuller
1900-1917 1901-1939
1903-
M
M
Dr. Percy Eaton
Annie Lear le
1901-1963
1903 -
Robert Puller Bell Marjorie Alberta Harold James
1887-1900 Bell
Bell
1895-
1899-
M
M
Gary Wood
Stella Margaret
1890-
Meaney
1898-1941
20
William James Margaret Mary Edna
Olive Islay Alexandria Ida
Howard Edward Clifford
Puller
Fuller Fuller Fuller
Puller
Fuller Fuller
Fuller Warren Full
1887-1961 1889-
1091-1900-1892-1893 1894-1899
1097- L898-1905
1901- 1902-1961
M
M
1910- 1919-
H
M M
Isabell
David
Hilton
Robert Alexander
Olive Herbert Ethel Anuli
McCallum
Jordan
Watt
1904- Heaffen
1891-
1884-
1891-1964
1900-
21
22
Ella Pu13¢r & names Ferguson
Margaret Pnitex
Perry Dalton
4 Joan yore tM1
Fuller
1907-
56
57
58
59
M
Evelyn
ednm teen
Walter Alexander
James Leslie
60
Ethel Jerre
Ferguson
Fergusonerguson
Fergusonun
arie Ethel
Heaney
1892-
1893-
1901-
1904-
Forsyth
1917-
1
M
M
M
L914 -
George
William
Morma Dorothy
Olga MCWettere
M
Wesley
Franklin
Martin
1910-1958
Clifford Cooled
Grant
811Th
1902-
Dunham
L89L-
1886-
1913-1964
Myra Kathleen Wilbur Clarence Fleur Charles Dr. William Harold Lorne
Stoneman Stoneman
Stoneman
James Stoneman Stoneman
1898- 1902-
1904-
1906- 1908-
1
M
M M
Eans Arnold
Mabel Isobel
Marion Reed Nora Horn
1903-
Ohm
1910- 1919-
1912 -
Edward Fuller Jahn 14axt Garden
Stoneman Stoneman Kingsley
1910- 1916-1920 Stoneman
1913-
69 Norma Eileen M
St
onema
n Olive
1919- H Dungey
John neuron 1915-
isle-
24
Effie May
Elizabeth
William Henry Georgina
James Murdock Boom Winifred
Frederick Fleur Calvin
Puller
Chapel
Puller Lyon
Puller Fuller
Vernon Puller
1878-1936
Puller
1882- Fuller
1886-1954 1880-
Fuller 1890-1915
M
1880-1913
1804-19LB
M
1892-1917
William J.
(1) Thomas
Money
Hutton
. - 1932
(2) Frank Ivy
25
Sarah Frances Fuller 6
William Sanderson
78
79
80 81
82 83 84
85
Frank
Eliza
George Albert
Thomas May Charles
Leah Catherine
Sanderson
Alberta
Sanderaoo Sanderson
Sanderson Sanderson Sanderson Sanderson
1878-
Fuller
1881-9 1083-
L885-? 1887- 1893-
1894-
1879-1958
M
M M
M
H
Esther Glanders
(1) James Shirley
Wallace Purdue
John J.
1892-1940
White Purdue
1893 -
Stephenson
1882-1934 1893-
1878-1961
(2) William
Brierley
1882-1945
86
87
Annie F.
Eva Sanderson
Sanderson
1898-
1896-1929
M
K
(1) Morley M
Leonard
Johnston
Robb
(2) William
Cochrane
Dr. James Herbert Donald Sol
sandham Bandham
1932- 1934-
M M
Isabel Joyce Wlunifred
Donnan Sarah
1934- Hex, [ley
1'934- _
Charles
Martin
1950
Fuller Brian Maureen
1941- Fuller Fuller
M 1946- 1958 -
Charlene Macy
James Albert
Lillian
Lucy Margaret
Ida Syreme
Nellie Louise
Henry Were=
Georgie Nebel
Harlan
France&
Harlan
Harlan
Harlan
Harlan
Harlan
1881-1930
Harlan
1887-
L990-1906
1893-
1897-
1900-
1
1884-
M
M
M
M
Hattie
M
Otto 8.
Harold J.
Leona Eva
W. 0. Mackie
Wisdom
Robert L.
Welch
Chrome
Prather
1898-
1882-
Phelps
1889-1950
1894-
1899-
1883-
30
Herbert Hare lay Fuller d
Annie Hills
Frank Mildred
Jean Hobert
Margaret
Houghton Puller
Fuller James
R®a
Fuller 1910-
1912= Fuller
Fuller
1908- M
M 1915-
1917 -
Robert (1)
John M
M
James
William Jean
Donald
Sandham-
Brennan Isabel
Martin
1900-
1915-59iDavidson
1913 -
Dr. James Herbert Donald Sol
sandham Bandham
1932- 1934-
M M
Isabel Joyce Wlunifred
Donnan Sarah
1934- Hex, [ley
1'934- _
Charles
Martin
1950
Fuller Brian Maureen
1941- Fuller Fuller
M 1946- 1958 -
Charlene Macy
6.
30
on s inued
s
I`
Dennis Robert Douglas Jams Graham Harvey
Warren Robert
Sandhog,
Sendham Sandbag,
Sandham
William Robert Terrence
Jacqueline Murray
1958-
1960- 1962-
1963-
Brennan
John
May Arthur
1938-
Bteomn
Brennan Brennan
M
1939-
1942- 1945 -
Mary Antoinette
M
Corral
David Franklin
1939-
Andrew
1940 -
Jahn William Rhonda Jean
Brett Allan
—�
Brennan Brennan
�n
Brennan
Frank Howard
Wee Daniel
James David
1960- 1962-
1963
Andrew
Andrew
Andrew
1960-
1961-
1962-
32
33
Ida Fuller 6 Moves Mills
Laura Louise Fuller fi William Richard
Coulton
William Fuller
Janice Lloyd
Thomas Ruth
Betty Jean
Harry Withrow Marjorie
Donald
Kenneth
Mills
Mille Hills
Mills
Robert
Coulton
Conlon
Manning Alberta
1919-1919
1920-1922 1922-
1924-
Mille
1915-
1917-
Coulton Coulton
M
K
1929-
M
M
1919- 1920 -
Harold
Florence M
Paula Burk1
Bile an
M
Spencer
James
Evelyn
1928-
Flaming
Helen
1917-
1925-
Alice
Athersmith
Catherine
Norman
1919-
Holmen
DnAIla—
oD—neia-9iuce Kei
1919-
1
Spencer
Spencer Carl
1929-
-
1949-
1949-
1953- Spencer
Robert
William
1955-
James
Allan
Mille
Mills
]emee W1131am John Devld
1948-
1951-
Coulton
Coulcon
194)-
1949-
32
Dorothy James Chester
Fuller
Fuller Body Fuller
33
1922- 1927-
1
M M
(Continued)
Gerald Bolton Shirley Johnson
1922-
(Continued),
1921-1955 1925-
xen<r Jazz
Ruth
Angrove Angrove
David Dolton Anne Bolton
1952- 1955-
Virginia
Elizabeth
David
Glenn
Donald Janice
Kathleen
xozman
Robert Elizabeth
1962- 1963-
Louise
Ruch
Thomas
Mills
Mills
Mills Mills
Coulton
Coolish
Coulton
1950-
1955-
1956- 1959-
1946-
1950 -
1956-
Roeemery
Catherine
William
Christine
Richard
Elsie
Margaret
Paul
Janette+
Alexander
Coulton
Coulton
Coatcnn
CouRton
Coulton
1952-
1954-
1956-
1960-
1962-
34
James Clifford Fuller 6 Marian Bed
Patricia Jean
Dorothy James Chester
Fuller
Fuller Body Fuller
1920-
1922- 1927-
1
M M
Donald Anrovel
Gerald Bolton Shirley Johnson
1922-
1921-1955 1925-
xen<r Jazz
TZ
Angrove Angrove
David Dolton Anne Bolton
1952- 1955-
1946- 1950-
Dilaryes
II[F Barclay
Fuller
yiiler Puller
1962- 1963-
James Glen Arlene Wendy Dwyla Jean Ile Ruth Evelyn Harold
Arthur Douglas Margaret Louise Marjorie Erb Erb Erb Erb Erb
Sheldon Sheldon Sheldon Sheldon Sheldon 1921- 1923- 1926- 1927- 1931-
1951- 1953- 1954- 1957- 1959- M M M M M
William Ernest ➢r. John Douglas Margaret
36 Joseph Albert Munro Albert Burki
Robert Miller Puller d Hannah Erb Hoggarth Berry Stewart Blair 1931-
1921- 1914- 1917- 1926-
02. Sack Edward Nancy talar Robert Arthur I
Fuller Fuller Robert
Pullet John Ernest David Allen Robert
1921- 1923-1943 1932- Berry Berry Paul
M 1954- 1956- Berry
Margaret Gwendolyn tlugh Johu 1957 -
Duthie Hoggarth Janet Cathryn
1923- 1949- Hoggarth. Ann Blair
1955- 1953-
35
Hesaie Sve1 Puller 6 George
Gibb
Marjorie
Hobert Fuller
James Herbert PM1ylis
Charles
Isabel
Gibb
Gibb
Evelyn
Herald
Gibb
1922-
1926
Glob
Gibb
1917-
M
M
1928-
1934-
M
'Nyle Smyth
Muriel Feick M
M
Belton
1922-
1927-
Clayton
Blaine Prances
37
Malcolm
T
Sheldon
S6ackletan
Ella Eliza I
1917-
BM1etasCibb:: Lyvde
191a-
1934-
T
1940: - Gibb
95]-
A31av James
DouglaGeorges
sunny
yn
r
James Bruce Douglas
': Gibb
George
Jane
Gail
MalcM1
Malcolm
Malcolm
1952-
Gibb
Dills
1156
Gibb
Gibb
1946-
1948
1956
1956-
1959
1963
James Glen Arlene Wendy Dwyla Jean Ile Ruth Evelyn Harold
Arthur Douglas Margaret Louise Marjorie Erb Erb Erb Erb Erb
Sheldon Sheldon Sheldon Sheldon Sheldon 1921- 1923- 1926- 1927- 1931-
1951- 1953- 1954- 1957- 1959- M M M M M
William Ernest ➢r. John Douglas Margaret
36 Joseph Albert Munro Albert Burki
Robert Miller Puller d Hannah Erb Hoggarth Berry Stewart Blair 1931-
1921- 1914- 1917- 1926-
02. Sack Edward Nancy talar Robert Arthur I
Fuller Fuller Robert
Pullet John Ernest David Allen Robert
1921- 1923-1943 1932- Berry Berry Paul
M 1954- 1956- Berry
Margaret Gwendolyn tlugh Johu 1957 -
Duthie Hoggarth Janet Cathryn
1923- 1949- Hoggarth. Ann Blair
1955- 1953-
36
9. (Continued)
Susan Margaret Andrew
31
(Continued)
Gordon Richard Charles Eric
Roberta Anne Edward
Arthur
Erb Maurice
Puller Puller Fuller
Erb
Erb
1946- 1953- 1954-
1953-
1956- 1958-
40
41
45
Winifred Marjorie Puller &
Edward Talus Puller &
Darold James
Bell & Stella
Dr. P.R.
T
AnnieLaurie
No Bay
a�
Behe
Louianue Robert Allan
TerenJemea
Terence Awe trace
vuvtrn Puller
Marion Ireoe
Noma
Thatna Thorne Thorne
Pu11cr 1942-
Fuller
Ee1L
Bell
Bell
1935 1936- 1938-1940
1938- M
1925-
1928-
th
M lane
M
N
MyrenCetl
Robert 5<M1mltlt Elaine
Ewald Lynch
Kenneth Romuld
Wilkes
1930- Erb
1918-
1926-
1938
Z 1943
-Gail
Kathryn Anne .
Ra ren Dowld Coleco
Terence Wayne satire
Schmidt
1950- Bnmsld
Thome Thome
1963-
1957-
1961- 1963-
'
43
Bryan Lynch Robert
Terence Kelly Lynch
Hu h Arlin ton Bell & Wada
Alice Copland 1948- Lynch
Lynch 1961-
1950-
1955 -
Anne Margaret Ida Nary
Bessie Alice
Nhllamina sell Bell -
Bell
Dell 1916- 1922-
1922-
L9L4- M M
M
M John Jones Klillard
Cordon
Wallace 1906- Orville
Anderson
Bareieon Eldred
1919-
1921--1916-
T
10. 43
(Concluded)
Patric is
Robin
Kenneth Gordon Garth
Wood
Harrison
Harrison
1931-
Anderson
Anderson
1943-
1951-
M
1947
1950 -
Forman
Richey
Hugh William
Evan John
inches Data
L93]- Rattray
Jones
Jones
Jones
1933-
193>-
1950-
1954-
1955-
GregoElroy
Perry Michael
44
ftnymopd Alexander
1956-
Richey Rettray
Marjorie Alberta Bell
6 Go
T
Diane Marjorie Laura Pauline
Gary
Robert Milton
Harold
Hamchy
Ida Betty
Kath
Archibald
John James
Banned
Alberta
Good
Lila
Wood
Wood Wood
Woad
Wood
1929-
Woad
1917-
L9L9- 1919-1960
1921-
L925-
M
1931
M
M
M
M
Wallace
M
Margaret
Bessie
Base
Lorne
Bennett
Fred
Jones
Chapllo
Cask
Brown
1928-
Happ
Woad Anne Marjorie
1951- 1955- Wood
195] -
Happy
1956 -
Brave Marjorie
1946- Brown
1951
Margaret
Marshall Annabel
Olive
Wood
Wood Woad
Wood
1931-
1933- 1933-
193]-
1
M M
M
Elroy
Prances Floyd
Forman
Richey
Cook Alexander
Paul
19T
L93]- Rattray
Deduct
1933-
193>-
GregoElroy
Perry Michael
Kishey
ftnymopd Alexander
1956-
Richey Rettray
1962- 1962-
Diane Marjorie Laura Pauline
Reduce
Baoust
1962-
L960 -
u.
Susan Betty
i
Harald Debra James Joseph
Fore
Marjorieria
Wood Wood Mood Wood Josephine Mood Wood
1950-
1953- 1955- 199- Wood - 1961.
1959
46
47 54 55
William James Fuller fi
Margaret Fuller
S Milton Jordan Clifford Warren Fuller Dalton
Fu
Ieabe tl
McCallum_
66 Htbe1— fifi HtM1eJ.—
JHarry
eu oalmleery
Lloyd Roes Racry James
Ruth Am
William Homer James H.
Fuller
Fuller
Fuller Futter
Fuller
1919-1943
1923-23
1929- 1947
1949
R, C. A. P.
England
Olive Helene
Eduard Fuller
Robert Milton
Noma Beth Margaret lair Audrey
Jordan
Jordan
Jordan Jordan Ellenor Mario Joan
1913-
1915-
1921- 1927-1954 Jordan Jordan Jordan
M
M
M M 19LB- 1930 1934 -
Lorne .lames
Agree Margaret
Margaret Ano Leo Gxyda M M M
Jackson
Krueger
Mair 1927- (l)Norval Robert John
1909-
1920-
1924- Norris Russell Coulter
T
(2)Willies, Hallie Forrest
Ia,
Irwin 393
3-.,_ 1932-
Ralph Milton
Lorne Leroy Judith Area Bran
_
Emi[M1
--: Jackson
.. Jackson
Jordan Edward
1913-
1937-
1938
1951- Jordan
' M
M
1957-
Herbert
erbert Carol
Ellen Marie
Janice Dorothy
regory Eliteberh
Daer
Thiel
CethJorda Anne Rober[ Feulorrert
Mary
rEJohn
1941-
1944-
]o[dan Jordan
1959= Forrest
T
1954- 1956-
1961-
12.
47
-_
(Continued).
-
Nichael David Jeffrey Lome
Ift
Jackson
Jackson
Robert
Louis Virginia
Gary
1962-62
1963-
Smith
Mary Beth Anthony
1949-
Smith
Smith
1955-
1956-
Sharon Marie Murray James Sandra Leone
Jackson Jackson
Jackson
Robert Daniel
Douglas
Patricia Leases Marie
1960-
1961-
1964-
Bailie
James
Lynn Bailie
1956-
Billie
Bailie 1963-
1951-
1959-
51
56
Islay Alexandrine Fuller
E
EVelw PeiRuson 6 Geor¢e Grant
Robert Alexander Watt
IHelen
Alberta
Margaret Jean Wilfred Alma
Georgina
Dorothy
Belle Robert Fuller
Dldea, Beth
Thomas
Grant
Grant Grant
Eileen
Watt
Watt
Watt
Edward
1912-
1910- 1914-
Grant
1924-
1928-
1933-
Watt
M
M M
1916-
1
M
M
1939-
Duncan
Saatel Kenneth Helen
M
Glen
Audrey Heard
Wendell
M
McLeod
Halbert McClain
William
McNichol
1924-
Stacey
Mary
1903-195]
1907- 1918-
Bailie
1922-
1931-
FlorenceI
1913-
Knott
Joyce
Nancy Lon Beth
1940-
Ronald Norman Robert Wesley
Elaine
McNichol Aletha
Gran- Grant
of
1954- MCFicM1al
Dennis
John William
1950- 1952-
1951-
1931-
1959-
Stacey
1957- &
Stacey
Scacey
Allan
t959-
Gregory
Stacey
19fi4-
13. 51
6
(Cant
laced) '
_ (Cautioned)
Betty Jean James Gordon Robert John
Bailie Bailie Sallie
Richard
Stephen
David John Paul George 1939- 1941- 1954
Rolan
Joseph
Watt Hatt H M
Watt
Watt
1955- 1960- Kenneth Arlene
1952-
1954-
Adam Ahrens
Replan 1943-
1941
Alexander George Victoria Jean Janet Myrtle
McLeod McLeod McLeod
1940- 1942- 1947-
M
Janet Smith Margaret Helen Kenneth Grant Gloria Jean Thomas Evelyn Carolyn
1943- Halbert Halbert Halbert James Jane Joy
1935- 1937- 1938 Halbert Halbert Halbert
M M M 1940- 1943- L947
Alex Cameron Barbara Michael M M
1126 Hayward Derhadge Joyce Robert
1940- 1928- Tracy Knesevich
T-19 3 1939-
Euphonic Jean
Margaret Heather Svelyn Dale Kelly Halbert Ranaltl erhodge
Cameron
Gameron Cameron 1961- 1962- Tracy Halbert
1954-
1956-
1957- 1963-
Carolyn Joy Laurie Ann Shelly Blixab
Mary Lynn Sandra Patricia Burmese Cameron Cameron
Cameron Cameron 1960- 1961- 1963-
1958- 1959
14.
Mary Jane Gordon Laverne
57
Knott
Florence Knott
Knott Knott Walter
Alexander ForAusou d Norms Martin
1936-
Knott 1946-
Edna Jean Fe[ eon 6
William Franklin Ellah
M
1940-
James Martin
Thomas David Gordan
Dnilee Jean
Helen Mae
Ethel
Margaret Evelyn
Robert Thomas
Marion Jean Shirley Irene
Ellen
Ferguson
BUSH
RUSH
Ellen
Stith
---
1939-
1916-
Ellah
1922-
1931-
1930-.
1937-
Terry Lee
Cheryl Lorraine
1
19ffi
M
M
M
M
1956-
1959-
Laverne
M
Edward Ruston
Yvonne
William
George Robert
John
David John
1904-
Katherine
Ingram
Hyde
Knott
Grieve
Need
1924
1932-
1917-
1921-
164-
19J4 -
Carl
William
Karen Marie
Robert Thomas JOM1n Katherine
Margaret
Hyde
Hyde
William Allah
Irene
Ann Yvonne
1960-
1963-
Ellah 1957-
BUSH
IIlleh
1953-
1961-
1963
Patricia William
Timothy
Edward John
Lee James
Robert
Ingram
Ingram Ingram
Ingram
1954 -
David Gordon
Charles Harold
Dianne Joanne
1949- 1950-
1952 -
Grieve
Robert James
Helen Margaret
1945-
Grieve Grieve
Grieve Grieve
1947- 1948-
1950- 1955 -
Jahn' William
Mary Jane Gordon Laverne
Edward Bradford Richard Earl 58
Knott
Florence Knott
Knott Knott Walter
Alexander ForAusou d Norms Martin
1936-
Knott 1946-
1951- 1959-1959
M
1940-
James Martin
Thomas David Gordan
Dnilee Jean
M
Ferguson
Ferguson Ferguson
MCNairn
Thom a
1929-
1931- 1936-
1935-
Watt
M
M M
---
1939-
Frances
Helen Moria Elizabeth
Elizabeth
May Hogefield
Terry Lee
Cheryl Lorraine
Bannister
Brow 1936-
Knott
Knott
191-
1939- —�
1956-
1959-
Jane Marie
David Michael James Scott
Fergusonl
Ferguson Ferguson
Howard Thomas 61
1961- 1963-
Ferguson
1962-
69
Rarold Lorin Stoneman
6 Nora No"
James Jmltb
Storeman Stoneman
1944- 1944-
60
63
69
64
Harris yo:ayth S
Elmer Charles
Stow.vna
William
J Stoneman
C11£Enc__,_3_DunFam
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John
I in
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WilLlam J.
➢nMam DuMem
Stoneman
Stoneman
Stoneman
Stoneman
1934- 1938-
1933-
1940-
1940-
1942-
M
H
1939-
Norma Catharine.
Betty Wagner
Laurin 'Dianne
Weigel
Irving
Irving
1941-
1960-
1936-
er Uevid
Sherry Lynn
Lor£anne Catharine
Steersman
Stoneman
huohan
1961-
1963-
1963-
68
Gordon Kingsley Stoneman
6 Olive Danger
Maven Clizabeth
Stonerhan
1950-
-
69
Noxsa Ston�av
5 John Chevron
Matjerie Brine Robert John
Barbara Anne
Chevron
Cbeoroe
Chevron
1940-
1941-
1946-
1
Edger Charles
Irving
1939-
Laurin 'Dianne
Irving
Irving
Irving
1960-
196P.
L6.
24
William HenryPuller 6 Margaret
Ann Moxdock
70
75
8f£Se May Pullet
8vme Winifred Puller
fifi 1df1
6 Thomas
Jean Helen
Ceo[ge WiL18[d
Pxartk Parsley
Esther Winifred
Danny
Peary
Hooey
Hutton
1905-
1900-
1915-
L918-
M
M
M
M
Grace Evelyn
Lillian Veering,
James Francis
William
Payme
Wells
Haughlan
De Weea
19—x—
1913-
1916-
3
Wiliam Edward
Georgina Lyon Fuller
Hooey
Marjorie Mary
Pannfs P[ankifn
1931-
Hooey
Houcy
M
1938-
1941-
Anne Maxie
M
Christiansen
Donavan Percy
1933- _
Schultze
Charles Fuller
1935-
Patricia Anne Wil Dean
Hooey
Hooey
1936-
1950-
Leslie Dean Kelly Dennie
Frank Donavan
Schultze
Schultze Schultze
1959-
1962-
L963-
17. Sanderson Bamiiv
79
Eliza Alberta Sanderson 6
John J. J. S
Ella May Mabel Alberta Lbrley John
Stephenson Stephenson Edward Stephenson
1902- 1907- 1914-
(1) M H Edna Legge
Harold (1) Martin 1921-
Thougmeon Mead (D)
10973921 (2) lbouas
2) Welton Hills
A. 1916-1952
Holmes Gary Rodney
190 SCvpM1enaon 3tephenaov
1941- 1949-
A[[Fu[ Marg re[ LiLLlan JnM1n We Iran Harry Vernon
1Tnmpsov HoEws Holmes Holmes
1922- 192)-1930 1930- 1932-
1 x
Gertrude Florsoce
Harris Winifred
1926- Harrison
1931-_
___L Jack GI'.ar
Lr1av Knvdn Hn Imes white hhite White Wife Alta
1960. i93B- 1939-- 1941- 1944- 1947
M H M
Mems Patric is Joan Win
Coburn Purply 1932-
1934 1942- H
Carl
Edward James Therese Stockley
Waite White 1924
.1962- 1963. T—
Booth Booth
1958- 1961-
1935-
M
-
Jav
South
1938
83
May Sanderson 6
Ethel
Ethel
Lily May Hay George
Kenneth
Kenneth
White
Wits
While
Wits
1902-
1908
1911-
1913-
M
N
H
N
wiltiam
Joan
Dorothy
Harold
Keeler
Brett
Tway
Seymor
1907-
t9 6
1909-
1910 -
Marilyn
Kenneth
Seymmour
Keelez
Keeler
Keeler
Kehler
Keeler
1936-
1936-
1930-
1933-
1945-
M
M
H
N
Donald
Frances
Norma
Louis
Booth
[ohando
Webster
le
Boulel
1933-
1928-
19138—
—�L941/1—�-
Alax.
breads
Mark Scott
Keeler
Keeler
Boolet Bvutet
1955-
1957-
1962- 1
Lr1av Knvdn Hn Imes white hhite White Wife Alta
1960. i93B- 1939-- 1941- 1944- 1947
M H M
Mems Patric is Joan Win
Coburn Purply 1932-
1934 1942- H
Carl
Edward James Therese Stockley
Waite White 1924
.1962- 1963. T—
Booth Booth
1958- 1961-
1935-
M
-
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South
1938
18 I (continued)
Richard Ruth Eleanor Ruby Shirley Caroline John
Thompson Thompson 7waspson Thompson Thompson TM1ompsan Thompson Stephen Steckley
1943- L944- 1948- 1949- 1950- 1952- 1955 1960 -
Continued to R"
Eehcl Dorothy Mildred Adeline Charles Pearl 6wrge Betty Lane. June
SaaJersno SaWersoa Sanderson Sanderson Sanderson Sanderson Sandctson Sauleison Sanderson
1914- 1915- 19L6- 1917- 1921 1922-1923 1923- 1924- 1926-
1 M M M M M M M
Elmer (1) Geoigo I) GilM1ect (1) Alfred Hte11a Mary (1) (1) Seivert
Th also Lawman D Westphal Larson Jacgex PeGueeea Rleven
1910- 19ID-1944 (2) Harvey 1910-1962 t9=1- 191]- 1922- 1924- D)
(2) Emlt Moore (2J Ray \ 2) Walter (2) Rnbert
Caller 1914- Koctfgen And crass tied
191J- 1914- 921- 1926- _
(3 rc 16 Robert
Doswld Duane Sandia Batik eleven
Leman Lawman hence 1923- 1944-
1935- 1943-1945 1946- Rabin Russell
1935 M Anderson AnJenaon
PhlIlia Donald 1956- 1950- Ronald Jutli[M1 Jacqueline
Thfee Robins Hied Ritd Pied
1936- 1944- \ 1946- 1948- 1950-
1 Barbara Sharon Carol Connie
Jack Lauman Lawman Westphal Westphal Donn 'Larry Dennie Peat1
Malden 1936- 1937- 1945- 1945- Sanderson Sanderson Sanderson Sanderson
1934 M M 1941- 1942- 1943-M 1948 -
James Warren M M Linda
Thorpe Rnaulton Mary Anita Srambetg
1936 193 Winttop Solman 1944-
1iret 1946-
19 81
R£m Linde ➢eFEa TICO.nt lnYed) Rich .:_.
e®y hard Rete¢ Wayne Joyce voter¢ Steven
Thorpe 1960- lvoultav %vaulmv Petersen Petersen Petersen Petersen Petersen PetersenPeter6
1956- 1960- 1956- 1958- 1944- 1945- 1941- 1950- 1952- 1953-
M
John
Judge
t1944-
Gerald ' Anite
Judge Judge
1963- 1964-
_ 1
Pnmtln Mark Murt
MichSandeal ➢Senn¢ -Sander - -Roger CurtisSaader Sanan
de
1958- Nelson 1962- Sandersnv Sanderson Sanderson 51953- On SavderaOv Sanderson
1958- 1960- 19fi2- 1943- 1946- 1951- 1953- 1954- 1958-
Shirley Junior Gordon 84 85 RJ
Sanderson Sander Charles Sanderson 6 Leah Catharine Sanderson Eva Sanderson &
1927 192Y SFfrle_ due_ 6 Wallace Perdue Morlev H Johnston
M M
William CaPeroFe
FixPeron Bernice Aathieen Fobert Allen Christine Audrey
192
1921- 1929- Sanderaov Sandaxson lots- Johnston Lyle
1919- 1927- l9lg- J8-1919Johnston
M M 1918-1919 1921 -
Daniel Jolley John Durnford H
1918-1944 1915- Relm
A.I.A.
R.C.A_P,
Gordon Ronald Richard Daniel Brent Earl Brand@ Eerldem
Sanderson Sanderson Sanderson Durnford Durnford
1950- 1959- 1960- 1939- 1946 -
IM
20. 81 (Continued)
Charlotte Nancy Gary Fix Beverley, Donna Bruce
Fix Fix 1949- Fix Fix Fix
1945- 1947- 1952- 1955- 1963-
M
Gerald
Rickard
194�2-
Sheri Ann
Rickard
1962-
65
(Continued)
81 (Continued)
Robert L. Phelps
Cindy Sne
Daphne Goddess
Kitty Irene
Marilyn Mood
Burnell
Harlan ou
Johnston
1941-
Phelps
1947-
Phelps
efi
1906-
Jamee earl
Aerie B. Sanderson
Durnford
6Leamr_ d Robb
1
1963-
_
M
_�
Vefna 8 bb
Leo Clavinm
1922-
Maty Lrsa
Vlctot Leo
89
Lillian Frances Harlan 6
Robert L. Phelps
Cindy Sne
Daphne Goddess
Nellie Eileen
Gtofflgoe
George Ellwood
Harlan ou
Phelps
Aitchison
Phelps
M
Phelps
Phelps
1906-
1956-
1908-
1910-
1913-
1
M
M
M
Leo Clavinm
Harold Aitcbison
Mary Lou Willer
iJewell L.
L901-
1902-
I 1914-
Kurth
1917-
John
Mary Ann
Gone Phelps
Albert
OnoRabo[[
An JRay
Z
Clavins
Clavfna
Aitchison
Affchlsoa
Aimhison Aitcbison
Judith A
1929-
1940-
1935-
1940-1940
1945-1945 1946-
Phelps
M
11
1945 -
Victor
Ivorena
Michael
Larry
Groffignn
h
Mcclanan
Phelps
Phelps
1940-
1926-
1945-
1948- Continues
Pcancea go
Maty Lrsa
Vlctot Leo
James Robett
Allen Dale
Cindy Sne
Tarty Lee
1918- Phelps.
Gtofflgoe
Crof£igna
Ctafflgne
Aitchison
Aitchison
Aitchison
M
1961-
1962-
1963-
1956-
etlga1909-
BOggeby
g
89 (Continued)
Rebecca Phelps Sallie Roberta Baker F.dgar Brook Lorenz Bruca Clayton Brenda Frances
Rigsby Bigshy Bigaby Bigaby Rigsby Rigsby
1941- 194J- 19L6- 1948- 1950- 1957-
ugn
Jessie Eleanor
Robert Leland
paddles Hunald
90 92
Pbelpe
Phelps
Phelps
Lucy Margaret Berlin Nellie LOuise liarlen
1921-
1923-
1926-
6 Otto E. Welch Harold J Murals
M
M
M
Joe Handley
Mary Aetebury
Charlene
to ria Wilma Eliza Virginia Frances Jells Neil
1921-
1927-
gcherrer
Welch
Welch Elizabeth Closed
192]
1918-
1922- Chrane 1923-
Heidi� d
Phelps
M
M 1918- M
Handley Handley
Orville
Linton Budd M Pool B. Su[fon
1950- 1952-
RvuId
1920-
Lewis Pena 1921-
Hang
192
-
Susan Lee
Knbarr KLa William
Lawrence
1919
-
Phelps
Phelps
Phelps
Macho 01 L6ttmi
Bdbeco3
1951-
1954-
195<- Gary Ronald
Rebarah Lou Bndd
Eliza
Bang
Bang 1444-
Budd
93
1946-
1955-
1947-
Be_nry uar un
Earls, 6 Leduc Red
Prather
David Alan
Janie Carol John Lewis Joyce Ellen
Penn
Penn Penn Penn
Evelyn Louise
George Warren
Albert Lee
1943-
1947- 1948- 1957 -
Harlan
Healed
Foaled
1921-
1924-
1930-
_
M
M
M
Byron Karl Kees, Kaye Ronald are
hugh Painter
Naomi Christman
lilm Nrancas
Barran Snt Mn Sutton
1921-
1925-
Miller
1948- 1950- 1953-
1
1
22.
Linda Sue
Painter
1947-
93 (Continued)
Michael Maurice
Lloyd Harlan
Painter Painter
1949- 1951 -
Main Jean
Painter
1953-
Dennie Lee Deborah Joanne Timothy Allen
Ha[SEY Harlan Harlan
1955- 1957- 1963-
Charles Warren Cary Stephen Cheryl
Lyon Remit, Leo Laurie Jean
Harlan
Harlan Harlan Harlan Harlan
1947-
1949- 1950-
1953- 1963
94
Georgia Mabel Harlan d W.D. Mackie
Georgia Maxine
William Eugene
Mackie
Mackie
1931-
1933-
1
R
Hobert R Farrar
Jan Wimp
31920 -
Martha Susan William Oevid
Farrar Farrar
1949- 1951-
.
Kevin April Goodall Cameron
Hackie Allison Mackie
1956- Mackie 1963-
1961-