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HomeMy WebLinkAbout77STORY 1;u, Mao" Q„e<r,on Via+" 4. 111 THIS M COPY NUMBER OF A LIMITED FIRST EDITION PUBLISHED ON THE OCCASION OF THE ISBTH ANNIVERSARY TOWNSHIP OF PICKERING IUIY Pte, Ni"Il Huotl,,d a SYiyOm THE PICKERING STORY By WILLIAM A. MCKAY Published by The Toi of Piukniry Hietoeeal Srcidy hvraouUCTIO,v This is a book about Pickering Tuwmbip. It hug bin pm - pared m a million! volume upon the occasion of the one hundred and fiffiuh amtivetssry N the establishment of mmool ml form. cit In Plckerhte. Because it is about lhu purple of the mwmhip in attempt has been made to bring life to the written material by the inclusion of¢large number of fluctuations, haiarieq formula, and other contemporary materials haw been w iib the emtiw when h was felt they would give an air rdohousewifery W the story. Same longer excerph together with the terms figures for 1850 have Men included as appendices. There an u oum4r of family histories at the back of the book. Only the early piweers am to be found hem bemuse with the Inrush of people after 1837 it would haw mluirM a much larger book than this for Ne Inelastic flow, if later families had been fates Some early all or, ionto tidy briefly, some taken directly from W_ R_ lost "Past Years m Purkerme, me not mendaned at all bemuse they moved out of the town- ship at an early data and left no timid, or b comes, the form!, bed out a assembler or tons was I haw tried to inputs, the Murray of the unit to the history of the Province of Ontario, to the history of Cunwmr: and to take 0 sincesome rf arms smside the country at Influenced the of it, development. co11 MInt wms NPulm Interest in the CLmil past has token the form of collecting old Bottom and other mlin of an IF that is mewFewseem to mallw that the fomimm of the plmeers is not at as maturing as their thus want and it is Loped that soner who read this brief moment of early life inrea of Canada may be enmumgetl b look further and read some of the fascinating IwsW of history of other cartels of the country. Filly )an W W. W Word porawd -PA YT m Pilch. intfor We centenary celebration of IR I'Modup. In x M1e .aW that M1e uvhed Inner owulmin, xM1mr Tom, M1W Vale M1+vl in ..ndup area It RRkmIk n IM ta.l — III m xrr did In Im. 1 Mae F^n him. It all umkrulen It the ropi of Ow I im,rul &wont w P:lrrup 11111dun mid Iwim.1 Tlw I :I of IIInrrvW may nue bairn TwMRV Nan) MPk M1m mamied of Their mle, nib t rvdn amdrr [hire all liberliberaln,io[ Iwpepared in der Thi lin a wad. 'K Nmhidm m M. barn iform IN It Vi "Rn Yea" or Aci,,,mr - A numb N FcL WLWkal Ixxdlna W.o been Iw,d In the Pur and 1 arlmxk.'e m 6M rynwubly TO Color i'Hot nry of Cher xxI". TO r, Brown "Early Ihyn in 'parr [, 1`4't nd Jry and ne T*WW MJkI'C:'e m,,1 l lim agh Ilw Yc .. L by Mn. I. %Uxan and Alia Emnxe \kl.an xI, ham Porn a Rru hW .J weaemA<. llw H MITI IT Learn the ()mann (ia..r mrm ha, uho been ery uwEI H I wnum mi, NE (luv Pat I.loyal 1. J,mM, Nuhn Miller. Won puller. \In. lr.ve Rmi Petitim Lar wm, L.M1n orlon. InM1n I. NamNI. and Nn. Amy Smint an, Aped Them wn;n IM1r amack... am hoh haw lic n druwo Earn III mall and Ox opn.ro nMr..N are My MIT u0jumt IM' vVin, of r nh and pm m ant c mprof my w44, Mt mold Time quit, rM ibk to Proat It. real an 1 ,knew, o, at It vop gwMde. Ilihm A. MIXn, Il�ngm M1m. TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter 1 [., Prehistory _. _... _... _........... _.. I H Fur Trade and Exploration ..... _. 111 The English Take Canada __.._ _._____ 14 IV The English Plan Upper Canada _ _ _ 17 V Pickering Township Emerges _....._........ 20 VI Early Settlers _ __... _.. 27 VII The Quickening Pam _..__...._.__.._... 42 Vill Early Schools and Churches ........ 48 IS Pickering and the Rebellion of 1837 ........ 67 X Mllk and Ships - __— — -- _1 11 81 %I Agriculture and Policies in the leartics _.. 96 XII Prmpemue Times .......... ____. 105 X111 Ontario County _______... __..__._______ 112 XN Or, the Hump --- ---- --- — 128 XV Twentieth Century Pickering 142 XVI Pickering Today -.... -.... __.... 155 Appendix I The Iaumol of Timothy Rogers __ 174 it Tire Jamal of Wing Rogers ___.___.. ___ 183 ku Census of 1850 _.__...... _............ 196 Tv Family HistoricF 197 g v Roll of Honor _... 230 vii lie it rlv m,ul Owrhmd rMr Im Jure•r Irir llle our 1;, Wuly nmf uMn M Pun r4em 4mlr Iv pvdl Noor' rMnr wd ie rents nn. u.ndmn u. rH dWuu dw M er.• uW rr rn r u'liag rr reumuMl ..l miller mm, moan run r1,12 I P'a' dwr GJ •m MONnW nmm mm rhr uv dow .. �.. nmNr Rnn• to, torn x,Wd n n,, hnnenl hod uW in rH rM Ine rwimme OM1. re.nem rH majr r nl rlu ...... r"'r unJ rcmpr vv M10 MPRW. kv Tnu Ow d ..... ed TI, PwwM 4G. i. un ahi, n•,&, in Wm ,ho 1, mpre a Mlmr n x•.rNip WJ•vrmm lhr ,P,mg ml p•.ue. TMdwe prow tM bN mr 10,ir and m uWm arridr mnWmunm or. lv. mrlrcn, Din dmn shell In MnnM urMrriunr wd 1w •J•edenr ro Mr m"em Jim nom. Ile . rM evYm •.I 11 p.nlwu ot nv hit r,p mn m rM M..mr. llir snow .Horror 1,0IM1 II n rm r v n tM 1 Birth, /I Ir lull ..I Ill, v,4,r.., x'im.. •mmn¢ �t eolm, rnm nW rM Brute x era mm�rul Mo Moir ...... O IMMn fh, L mi M tH dm'r M r4v III, mul n,iA in M /vthr M Ma. Memd rn 1H , 13mmNf RWE6 PI( KERING, I!_] CHAPTER I PAEHMO-ORY In pre the nal umc this aroa was a basad platy, Liked toward the Centre of tle maddest. It win Conrad by the triWlafsx of a gnat river which owed wesmaM Nmugh what u how the bed of risks Ontario. to join a river system emptying iron the Gulf d Mex Om limes glacial ire Conrad has, probe, and each time he ice herded it left a deposit of nibble, clay. avvd add Walden Outing the glacial rated, two woman lobes of is "Copied this proton Of Ontario. One load had isCentro n Ne present lmke Ontario main, the Cher lav north of what is armed the Oak Ridges. The latter, an extcmivc belt of sandy and 6asagv hills which stretches from near Orangeville to Rice Use. is an tedobate m e which was formed by the ae ntuhtioo of material betweenmoraine i" loon. As the Into$ Of meadvanced to want each other, racy pushed formed a great maw of laoss rubble, and as worming began We .brooms which flowed hewn from Ire melting ice carried navy (tads M land and genal to deposit them in me home fee area. Here w ashy, the Oak Ridges Momine, which is .till pleinty maids from almost any gran Of pickling Towniltip, aid want we know as the Uxbridge SaNM1Jh. Sou@ a this ridge the Robot of the glacier, hid rexuhed in the formation of a poor mmp"y Of ice -ground rock ru ...passed with coarser hurricane Of mark of warem, shows. As the mmhem lobe of on riumal a shallow thin was formed bounce the ordered share dge and the melting i¢. For ages the load] was under water, •a Nat Ne crushed rock was covered with testament laid down on de, woman Of the lake. ODnlinu d ammetion fount the are lying adlwm t th, St. Iawrcamc in the vicinity ot de Tammmd WutlF The present awnsbiP MLL".,. z.=.a,«-• � .._._..a awnsbiP boom of Sake Ontario was ice free, but managed by a much Larger lice which garlogists have called Lake Lummic This lako caisred for u long time anal land a well defined shoreline which may mill be traced today as it ran foam the pram patriarchal gives to a point about two mays south of (hectometer Sandy reschm and onshore bun lay along the Ammline, while lumber out a deep deposit of clay was laid known. As due ice Is Ne eL Lawrence valley arapPomed, It w u a dam were removed, and Lake Personal avoided to mmtnc present Lake Ontario. At the same time, streams hawing down tram the ooMefo mights of land began to cm out the valleys n which we no them flowing today. A visible ¢minder of the ice age is the criminal a small oral hill drums up our of Ne surrounding plain by the wommuln- on of rubble under wine cocked glacier. Pickering College was built on one M these pre historic relics, the summer surgery at Rosebvvk built amuvd another, while a down mom go sonamed throughout the present larva p down to the very edge of the lake at the end A the Rank Road. Prom the ridge of sandy high laotl in the vm an of the Township tMre is a drop toward the south to what is called the rolling plain. This plate which lies just m the south of Claremont is deeply dissected by valleys with shop sloping sitles. Farther south the land becomes finder in what hos been called the shallow Clay platin. This is sommoted from the dap clay plain of the lakeshore by a sandy area with numbers and scrubbytrees along now was mce the short of Lake un is. Here again the dreams now in deep valleys whose sides art man heavily worded This is where greveln caned today. Long after he anchor receded and lake Ontario became cm- nned within its patient houses mon came into the area. Who they wme ere, or where they cafrom we tlo not know. Possibly no Dii of the airport inhabitants will ever be found But of later people we have wine fmgmenmry cadence. Arrow and spam' pounds, scone knives and hes disrovertd by Mr. Hugh Squires on his facts near the month of Dulhns Creek hove been metal by the Royal Ontario Mmeake as being of the Laurentian perictl. This would mean that mea were well established in a village set n tlh Lich sandy ridge a MY mike from Lake Ontario four thousand years age near where Lattice Creek comment ora taro a slow. lary marshy ensure. The earliest village that has been identified 'as ouch lies fear miles farther up the same cream. In 1959 areheologin, farm rho Royal Ontario Museum began excavating this site which has proverdto be one m the most interesting such mInterval dlaoc i mode In Cmaw. Under the direction of Mh Will,, Unit n ��>, q4t �f A .g�� i1. y t. . . u".ti �q '� �m whole village has been awarded. Again :he inhabitants ¢feted candy ridge on what bad perform, ban a beach of ancient last moat s. They on only a same, Nmw foot the mcam. Wi font any antl Mom by, m their „ilium as, rcm ough me suam that it comem o could M ad carry them dean the lake a Mao the area hest. where they could catch the flab that made up rge pan of their mar. As a further promotion against honlle mothers, they built a pofiwde annual the entire village by driving pons into the ground o forst: a large irregular oval. They took cam too to have a tall sp:'ing cars are side of their promise forth&ations. Inside No Iml'na n they built houses, each of which was occupied by cral familia. new were again oval shaped Imidioge made by sinking long poles loon fee ground and then bantling the tops together until duty me4 and rowring the whole 'truchurc, pmb- nbly u'iN slabs of bark. batch Wow had a number of heanM1s or Ort plata had sloe lave prowled! us with court Wal do ot- lagan lima an mm and fid. and on game and birds wham they mum get ahem. Mr. Walker baryon, i concluded tom tie fact that skelnom have May nmenhed with nmmv points still maturing farm the bodies, that We security precautions which then people took were not &wry as they seem to have been engaged in at Inner one bull: with their enemies — whoever they may hove been, n In whifficin to -We yuan lies of broken pot, spear and arrow, heads and tools Wal haw Men found nrchuulmveisu front the Royal Oatario Monsoon haw also tamarind chat clay counter, nod maNks which most have Men used in game.& This seems to show that lie bad its lighter morrows. Rua copper from at cannaments how Men command also. which perhaps may mean thatthatalltheir dealing with their fellow m a Wsis m hostility as Nis copper, of the type called float or dairy copper. is found Innately, 1c Northern (Mme. No doubt further inastigetion will reveal many other ancient Agent, as bio of pommy. arrowheads, knives and sompea have Men picked up in many flown and it thepresence to sup - Me that epresenceof n sandy height sroverlmmng Dallas Crack, Ounbttn Crack, petticoat Crack or We River Rouge, would be ser trvnam, for primitive sellkman to mment i •Omw Nivor, — Vnl. l.11. N,r. I. Main# 19wt Nm'A owu "Mmeuni lig —1960 Cun. 1/l CHAPTER H FUR TRADE AND EXPLORATION Cham Plain o map which he proJi2d in I632, slew, a river which may have been modern m the Ruder, But do, strength of the ImWois in the arm mmedimdy nunM1 set LAC Ontndo nnJe h almost Impmshlo for u Pmnddi to persuade the counhv. By 1656 the Imgw:is hm! driven the ensemble remnant of the Hurons northward amity the sedum shot, of Georgina Bay uno for twenty years were an :dm untlispmcd pas of the Lake Ontario myon. They moJ as traders and middle earn IIm the Dutch and fordish of the IluJmn Rive, Valley ',ad the Swede from New ivory. During the time then they held sway ever the north sham of Lakc Omariq safe estahfishod a few permanent vllingm uo this side of the lake. Became Nr, w ainly interested m collarbone Inns fee the interior, shed, vllingm situated whom ri emptied into Lake Ontario or where wer a Iradlfront the more, found is way town to IM1e wider '& edge. Only two llei nlLmm nm marked on Setters map (about 16]9), OamtmkwTBon nes[ Fmnchman's Bay and Kwtd An the Buy of Quints Chromium, is mmkcd on later Pope on the predid 0 of airports. Krone, nn Rice Luke. Ganaaske on the present m of Port Hope, and Takamatsu an the momh of the Hodder are mentioned 6 In u latter of Do Crack - was t lk in the advance of she Iroquois was to great that there XIV. tene In the a vice of Coning Its colony elleal e charter Louts fthe ncd an mu ad viaehr,h Ba erased ad ego of the Hundred intresred to the trade,.outdomain, Naw FraBest and ,Cana a. and and restored named mGo domain, all New France, Canada. W Ar. and Acadia. He named a Guvcmor nnJ Suvcmien Council of Ove to gwxnr the mamry. The trading monopoly In then penned to the West bodies Campeny. In keeping with Wei now policy. Lt. Gen. M. do Trac moved in Catrada in 1665 with the Cafivormar Urines Retuned. He bunt forks witch lob We Diagnosis invasim mute &ran Ne Richeliev and by carrying the attack vita de frryuais nsAory, he forted the enemy to sue fm knew_ Established in I667, this uneasy once I ... hall for offering vans. After be esmMuhment of precr the colony made rapid psoFeu for a few y and "aeration a to country to the weat of Motion was possible. The Imm ds ed had their tiny. Near the French were taming back determined to menporm the far Bnde. One of the Ont French madeas on Lake Ontario was Pend, who evldontly knew the coumry welm, as he acmmpmbel the "Inal tlon in 1669 when kolfi t any out fmm Mononl to Lake Superior w earch for a copper anifive which was benewd to nen them. At the Vilinge of Gananckwyagan which lay hot ..I of rim mond, of the Rouge RWer, thev struck off access eounln Io Lie lio,on- On tin Battier-Gallnee map, mm of tin earls 11 apposite the a Gan nkayagar. It . 110sf o, M. Perry (ix) and M16 pry camped in campententes Lake Horns — wen 1 tram xm me passa e I nit ®,x it; however it i..aid dw rend is wry rim and it is hem the remained" of Si Salpic; wiN establish temuFa."' To the mind of the srvenut mintury Preach adminmraor the ehelbng d warning the fur node was some important ,Inn that of prmnodng We church. But to dw Inhuman no aboacl, e tin got 9 it meant bringm. Clumnanity to tin Indians. Honda tiro losing session in the Georgian Any Was had been generated in the Immune win twenty )tere mtlier. As the fur traders unit explomus came back, so did the intensities. The tinder sc den rt aimed long in any Village, but tln mandatory, Incomes of his and hiS With, took UP his rtYtlence hived suRcnd and often Wormed among big people. Francois de Selig i c de Fenlon, the first missionary in mein is mPicketing Township, did got perish here, ben Ns experiences during The your that he workW among de. Indians long the lake short cauM him 4ldmg suffering Won in n,c minion de Fen. eon. Rcrigord, bounce, in 1"]I he was uw sin of Court pea We aiynx. Fmrcaie wen edtuaW in the nunnery of ST. fulpisw at Paris of weeh his mink, to Margins a Fmebn. was a boomer. In a time of gem whanan sat it was natural that his life I)v m FImuP un. �y tt � it - mc�n Amula me mount Iaw.N theInk of Chris , plc m nu Cudn in Joao Id61 rva, ordained in Ne Order of St. Sulfide :ma prepared himself to undmake the task of brio@ng Christianity to Ire Indians. Froname had been of the opinion that the Jesur momentum, had not worked hard awash aro the missile foto alines ru: and FcM1m an wbuu Ne Indian hal Quint ua rebound and asked the ta- aright be se work among the Slpo: ushoed for the task The war fila to Furadlorn and names: by phrase Laval, who wastenm U. lows To ou I'll beloved in the Isr0. Fmnmie is sm,pr:ac: We sive you rawer and authority to later for the newsroom of this people, ro comer sdomycls, on it wW aonmwy m do up that you shall deco: proper for the conaoul :nem of the four road the increase or the new Chrialan body, murmur rota to be am tell 1, aur beloved Claude Trouva'• On sumer 2 1668, Innelon and Tmuve xl or hour Mont" all mnomi; at QInae on Ottober 29. Trouve wrote of the tllf- realty of the dolman and of his bleeding feet, but added, No one could be leaders! in a more Liendly Way than we were by these FaaaI dully.. did what be could, odea to an old woman who put ,It on the earn"— an return which with a ow pumpkins seems to bow own the only crop 9111 by (lie Immi gn. The lw: Intolerantly settled into a doth nod asked the in, Crimensltoulde be, m them for main warm At Iran Wefudian, auylcbur that halibut c,used deand beet... the mushoura and Ireful to bapti'i< all ding children. But modally data fears ,can boom me and the work went ahead with visor. In 1669, rotation nnvelled to Mortal algae and remord with mOihm adnimary, SUrfe, The note yea n number or armed, from the %these of numaCviwyu6on paddld down the Take to Ouhm to ask has u rlnmry humin vl t rhos. The nd nary dmhrfe reanedat the Onime roomn and Feneloo went wide (Ile i e otas to their vlllag Jp shote of near me shof reundttnuns Inner he spent what do, ,to of the won't winters un lord, method had destroy intended to mifsh his miallarnassion uhootom mark I�wffered but the ", ers,who M1atl inter Into thud ur darty IM1mt now to elm nTo a woe n has m k, Fa Inm the surrounding hong forcstn w M1nnr To entry on his work, Fenelw has ra ua whin a din Gradually re destroyed w 'r by the delude d and the f No n ow trait tmev a rl osetharound me hale and, and the frost Jene- nmwl ro deeply alma nits =muntl vsdf remained lmun wN Jorma Ilvllm de Caatt" A Nuwnof htmure4 11 Onto (API Chndnmfu Bearn-1944 Mesmvhile, Fenlon continued his ministrations to the smashup IMians around Frenchman Bay- Food bwame to watch that he as thankful for a squirrel or a chimmier that came his way and metimes was reduced to gnawing the fmtgi which grew at the coca of the pine owes. In the spring he rei mmst his stops in pointe, discouraged and in broken health. During 1670, he mm on to Montreal mod there he is regained to have told Bishop Laval, that it might be for Sire bear if everyone word forget his work From Quebec Fenlon look ship for Franc, carrying with him • map of the nonh sham of Lake Ontano and Lake Huron, and a leder from lo¢Mant Talon to Calben. "Another missionary", Talon wrote, "alai from the Seminary of St Sulpim has peau crated farther than he, in order to find out for me about a river for which I was looking in order to establish communication be can Luke Ontario and Lake Huron where they say there is copper mine. This missionary made a map of his journey, a ropy of which is in the heads of the said Abbe Fenelon."' In France the mieasnary waa nbk to discuss his problems with Fromeme, whom he met at the home of his uncle. It is not sur- prising to lind that they were in agreement that previous methods of ammmng the mdlam had not been mayssful, high men had bad fico hand experirnm of the diRuvlty of trying to weak among P. 1. R'bum". to c" Wy 21 h Q ntin n. a:.aw.• 1, - or ". � '01 G. uO p...dw, ^ Q8 ^ B.. ;\\It m s9 % m L5 dr t'py�. �e t°a v 'mee LAC ONTARIO Vis" ad .aC'...n.a..... Y A. t 33 q�s�awt ''✓ D N�q P Y Chndnmfu Bearn-1944 Mesmvhile, Fenlon continued his ministrations to the smashup IMians around Frenchman Bay- Food bwame to watch that he as thankful for a squirrel or a chimmier that came his way and metimes was reduced to gnawing the fmtgi which grew at the coca of the pine owes. In the spring he rei mmst his stops in pointe, discouraged and in broken health. During 1670, he mm on to Montreal mod there he is regained to have told Bishop Laval, that it might be for Sire bear if everyone word forget his work From Quebec Fenlon look ship for Franc, carrying with him • map of the nonh sham of Lake Ontano and Lake Huron, and a leder from lo¢Mant Talon to Calben. "Another missionary", Talon wrote, "alai from the Seminary of St Sulpim has peau crated farther than he, in order to find out for me about a river for which I was looking in order to establish communication be can Luke Ontario and Lake Huron where they say there is copper mine. This missionary made a map of his journey, a ropy of which is in the heads of the said Abbe Fenelon."' In France the mieasnary waa nbk to discuss his problems with Fromeme, whom he met at the home of his uncle. It is not sur- prising to lind that they were in agreement that previous methods of ammmng the mdlam had not been mayssful, high men had bad fico hand experirnm of the diRuvlty of trying to weak among P. 1. R'bum". to c" Wy 21 primitive native village, bnndreda of miles from We council European and began W consider new ways of accomplishing their objectives. Lau s%IV, was beginning to sec Now Fiance as a Slowly to a great Someone empire and gave full support to Foraces's plan to establish a school at Montreal to which Indian saJtlfen might me to be educated He hoped to make a French ration of me Indian terl So, when Frontenac berntm Governor of Carole in 1672, he gave F i three Js w the St Lost neat' Montreal where W might begin his experiment in education. In 1676 the new murder, school was established and Fenelon was named Care do Sam de Mile de Montreal_ In Chine, Points Glare, St Anne. But feenclon's dream am short 4vW. He quar- mind wish promotion over Perm( the fur trading gavemor of the shed of Montreal, was brought to court and recalled to @an reaches never removed to Canada, but lived on in Frena until 1679. Its sojourn In the wlWemess and the fru9m(bn which he felt at not loing able to carry his missiae to a sawessrul eonelu- ,men brought on his deem at the age of mirly-eight At the Sul- pician mssionat Quince, mistioaanes controlled their nvok trying So bring eivii radon as they knew it to fie Indian,. They sought W prevent the Iroquois from timing five babies in the gtavn of their dead mothers, bat they failed or their attempts to S offer women to take can of We tiny orphans and smooth the mission- s themselves tried to keep these children alive, they waste not ,,it,, mcooful and eoWd oudy capable them rod may for those The warialy or rather from arum of Lnke Gmmio, who plied me l home with min, added to mdr Sodium, and it k not bkely @m any mom firm a very sporadic attempt wu ono& to keep the mission it Farmhouses Hay alive. Meanwhile Indians of the goes were posited m meet some of Candia most famed explorers. In 1673, Brommae invited the Chiefs a Ganatsekwera8an to Fort Frogman, now Yost for onfnmmm Joint, La Salle In his "Warden throe", Games and Doubt de Casson as well as Governor tla Crusades, all came along the court shore of Lake (Abuse. Dobler de Casson impressed the Indians by the fan that be sold hold a man in either and, znnM on the palms of his hands, either both at once e at a time, so mat be demonstrated not only great call ability but almost super bumm attention. Count Dramatic stopped at Gennsdogyagoa be 1687 as he brought his flotilla bock fzmn Summit the Ingim z villages an the food shore of the lake. Here he enjoyed a feast of two hundred den and di pmbmly the largest may ever held in Ei can- ing. Oa July 5, 1687 he wrote, 'The minor of wind and coca pmwnted ,s lanrian in the morning, but at mom No weather cleared up had no advanced mover, or eight leogmes mall arrived at a risen, Gmwok,yamar, to wimh 1 had sent forward our ehnfirm Indvi firm below. We found them with two hundred I mi had killed. ,Paid share of which they gave an our army, Thaloui P11I by rldm fortunate clisi Fort porosity at the lower end of into Omario was built In attemptan m crawl the English and Dutch under; who, real their tropical, allies, rias up from the momh and east. As a result of this development Fnglish traders began to come round the Western and of the lake to meet homes coming down from the Goormi n Day mai by way of due Holland anti Harder rivers. With Ne westward mvm of the fm trade, the old homily: from the village el Gmaauekwirmon became less and less lathier nor and, at a mlmivsly icily date, the village itself seems to have been abandoned Jost when the French woman W have overcome me reforms problem, their pi as reamtcrm of North America war threat. tried by others even more serious. New York fell to the English 11664. Sk years later Ne Hudwn's Bay Company was founded. So that when Firestone arrived in Canaria in I67; he had to face not only Indians, but a comentration of English for tandem on either side rf flat French route to the morior. The French monopoly of wade in the Lose Ontario mgion was very Joan lived, it indeed it over existed. brin ou. OR Cir. in 16 CHAPTER III THE ENGLISH TAKE CANADA Came XIV may have had dreams of a Gear French mear" empire, but for him Europe was of more Immediate interest Al- though 4though he was itblmmcnlnl in having 2,00a new settlers came in New France in the yxurs 1665 -1672, he changed his polity after that time Narrow he felt that Frenchman could be bell,, ,it- phoyed in fighting the Dutch against Whom be marched in in, same year that Panamanian became Grissom of New Franco. Frame had a pognigno n many lima lager than Englund, her people wine ardent "flows, skillful traders end good mamgerc. but the Fremh monarchs ended their substance in lure minable were n the Cont ant The people, the money and the labor which might have me& New France a reality instead of a dream were destroyed in new which yielded twither glory nor profit. When in 1684 war came again to the North American momes, the end might almost have been !oxen. Ten thousand Acadian, and Canadians fought agair two hnndram thousand dridini Americans. The forces of New France, made on of hardened old solder's and men skilled in the ways of the forest — together with their Indian attics—mimed, for a time, W haw the English on the n_ As Ne at dmggea on superior numbers began of tat. By 1669, England and Frame were at war in Europe as wall es in Ne Colonies and the effect was Nat of divining the strength of France from the defence of her North American outpost Fiera raids, barman. scalpings and torture marked the course of the war in North America until peace came again in 1701. But it win or essy peace, bmkrn slid by Indian raids, binning farms, by voyages of prouteerc paying on coastal villages, The Iroquois had minimum Peace terns iu 1701. but the whirc protagonists whin soon at war again. 1'he '1'm y of Utrecht which ended the at of the Starfish Succession in ME as Access and The Hudson Ray Ic o the English, having the Frewh the long wu,d r if the St ki,sumc stun dice chain of Ion, rcmhing into the Minisaippi valley 9y face,, of thea rnmar are,,,, favor the Fr hoped to the westward advanc of theEngh1h std pro (he" for hear Can their u dr' ,,IT task, then every postale m:ntn likes in be used to keep the mu¢ open. Try Verendryc, one of those who pressed funhen west told the la&am of sit Charles In 1734: When yon dell win, them (the Lanka)) you levo to d, pus if they can your enwniea: they give sett no each; they do not ,]low you mane their rem you cannot nwwe the merchandise yount, but t obliged to take what Choy 1popv u Moaeh u window good orbad; they refect some of goat siig5 w ell be- e dead la o you atter you barn had a table orrying then their pot, It is true that Ofta twlmvm real things a little dearer — but they take a1I you M1ave, they target mthings you fur no risk, end yen M1ave not IM1e trouble of eerty n¢ your a ng long discern', ".• erne English Cawgndcd the nomonrdnn which in, Fam4 offered to their traders for .Anthony at weres Tice French talk severe Und'any hnyvtgn to factualism they htrve tire [ad adstage of no in every shape". The FrrnoM1 may have sad lit vantages. iotlodmg the it of Indian and forest lore wham they had aucumnMw hutheir handiest years of ending :and emplomtion. but they did not have the advantage of numbers. Onthe ace of the Rvry Year's war, which saw the final struggle reform the French and English in Camttlµ the French colony onalsoed only Snap). wlnlo in the English colonies to the north the population money fest one and a half million. the twee of the campaign which ended with the Iodine of French dowelin The SL Lawnvlcc valley in 1763 was, Us we know. the acquisition by England of aony, s1 amiamirctigilawm, w and cartoon and one col tied hask, ili Ione of mity whh the New England selective to the south In the Inlee pntsrw region, the only amnov of FmncM1 talc sees to have bn a hear of ashes at'ILronlu which land Mon Forkb... betaiale. Fret Frnn¢nae an the lower end of the Lake and Yon Niagara, now iu the hands of Sit William Johnston at the other end. "I lac far, Prwsh wherein, /staidly, and Ont ow/rc stairs7 had been need in supply the posts scall to Lave diFltprented in in 1]E0. D. G. Cr..of,. Donnas, or Clio banks. Year 116. The French bearmv was over. In the one hundred ya'.vs e Feneh minor bad fila pemmuamd the Lae Ontario region, m, bo¢uux and small Ships hal plied the water, or the great fake. Curvier do boil had followed the brain trails, orders and governor had vuih d Its villages bre thea was hole to nark Weir passage Premahmuta ely, mnnlW umbaps for the now .Iare penchant — or Perhaps for some amounted trader of later date. Petticoat —onpmully Petite Core Crack —a name derived prob- ably front the last that the east bwh If We milk Ls quite Iigh, while the well bank is almaq Mt near month Thus, to the French was We inlet with the "IiNo rido A plaque burning We e, Prune Our. was found on Mr. W. IL estimates property mmry years ego. Tire Rouge Ricer was probably m round became of the larch ruddy band ban" Sharon which b flows aaitenters Luke Ontatlo.➢WNn Crack, SO minty from the Irisin trade t' who is repnled to hove Ivan murdered near fhs present village of Pick- ering Rod after the French r¢Lm4 a, called Alviare an Saturn by the French. For remndes tire tiler and We rivers nnnteing into the 9t Lawrence system filmed whh Ooh, salmon being among the most common typk Wlun sentom Regan away changes were introduced in dw years Run, 180010 1900 Non In all the formula since the Ice bad finally retreated from the land - error now among these chmucs was the disappearance of We mannan from Lake Ontario. CHAPTHR IV THE ENGLISH PLAN OPPER CANADA When Britoil settled her ,Baia in the $L Lawarce by the eoty of Paris 1763, fie did not marriage a rapid movement of alers into the upper lakes region. Indeed she carried forward e French policy of placing severe restrictions even upon the far Wers, although like the French, she found itdifficultifnotinl- ,ssible to halt the illegal tmtlng that went on up and down the there an several more he north side of Lake quarter, width, if not In nm, lean tlanavenmte Rousseau. was memon to trade at 'lunula and from thence to any markets or pmts which he shmld Find advantageous for the sale of his merchandise —". His patty was to consist of one canoe with sir men Jumada himself. and his merchandise, valued at 000, included a quantity of am, wine, J rimes, 300 lbs. gunpowder, 16W Its, shm and b',dl. lie posted a hand of £600. He had headquarters at the Humber bra could Imtlu at any M We uvea of ba Timm that he minor pas including, Damns Gxk, Frenchm ing Ray, me Wmge and High- land Creek. N 1774, Britain se Out hot hope, and plans (of her naw colony in the Weber Acand with it she altered lire relationship which had been esmblisb,d in the previous len pan between the new colony end leu minter somhen relative; and made some clmh belweant Nom almost incntable. par many years(lie English colonies in North Ammica had been vinualft self governing and ectionermly mneift" aboutthelf fight$, while New Fran 6d a lodb3madwi, of the Ca..save ArtNre 1690. Sou fri P, 31, Q. 5-1, illusion to Cahbn. long uadltion of authoritanao government alae Formula of the Sa Iawrcnm valley reprettnted the mediaeval, mml. Catholic way of life while their southern neighbors war, the osercc of English Ptolestmtisna and lived in an agricultural and commercial society n which the mistamlis and ,.unary sag mems counted for far ess then in New France The makeshift government of Quebec which had gone on for en years was ended suddenly in 1774 by Ne Change; Act. In the eyes a the southern colonies it was mool almg With the Sugar An and the Sump Act as ane of Nm Imalmable Acts. It restated to Canada all the Territory down to the Ohio and out to the Mksinippi. It appointed a grateful, and m ncil with limited authonry. It opened the offices of government to Roman Catholkv ignored the tithe, reloined Frcxh Civil Law ;and admitted the use of the Pmoch languages The English whom,.w all themeaa- aimW directly toward destroying tin Saw w institution which they enjoyed. Scan Canada was at war ager, and Ne enemy was the same. Far a century, as guilt subjects, the Ameneun coloo4u had eyed Quebec. Now In the winter of 1775-76, the Americans M import Qwbe, dry bot rare Prat Smog rnoogh to take a But the fact that the Nagana mimics were not joined by the French handsome w,evidence of which way they would throw their allegiance in the foOl Oming stmgam of the Mirkan Armament Colonies. The war for American independence had begun and the Canadians had made a choice In such a struggle each ale is fomN to take a stand warrar though his patriotism may be — and by 1783, BRMKI Loyalists from the Atlantic Colonies pcumd into Nova Ratio, the first flood of a stream of immigmlwn which was ma o-mffam the old French Nr nothing empire inn a settled warnings. The emly loyalist groups Which metered the Morgan Pressures, were layi milamr, governmental and commercial families firm the irraboaztl cities of Bailout New York bad me smaller cost along may coast, Those who began no make their way into the region farther west wmm of two groups Otic moved up the Hudson Valley by Coke CMmrmora and down me Riimliea our Sorel where they stayed during Ne wearer of 1733-94. Another group came round by way of Niagara. Many of Wase wwtenmg at Sore" were from me earn= or Sir William Johnston, who died in 1774, or farmers firm New York State, mgether with consomms of We Royal Regiment of New York_In me spring of 1784 May set out to atab6sb new homes for themselves along the nonh share of the Sr. Iwwrcme managed fake Origin, between We last French settlements and IN Ray of Quinte. These were the founders of Gbngary and Stormont and of the old city of Kingston. Those who meted Canada by way of Niagara, fanned oat arm" the Pleasure penimula and along the shot¢ of Luke Erie and Lake Onlnrio toward what is now Hamilton. Some of them were calitaty and goverment people, but a greeter part of the group was made up of farmers and villagers who had palled on n the front rank of American colonial "armors and who now adapld themselves with ease to their new surroundings. Tire Treaty of Paris, 1783, ensured the osmba,ament of the independent republic which was to become the Holed gm¢s of America. The Loyalist migrations n of that public were to forty Birds to move beyond the Connre ote All, such had been designed only with the Old French e,itlement in mind, and begin to take into consideration the 35,000 new totters who streamed ars mho homer. The Loyalist settlements at Many^ and Quina were still operated by vast Indian tc as 1787 the Governor Genaeal, Lam Tami req wrote to 1011, LaMar, Deputy Sur- sayerGeneralas follows: It noun thought expellent m]oln the settlements of the Loyalists m Megan, to Nene west of Gmmgw,' Sir John Johnston I'l o bttom dittoed to take sort steps with the Indians concomed, ay be to xary 1, nablish a Gee and amkable right for cme nvammcar To the ifterjaum lands not yot onmhssed on the north ofLake Ontario, for that purpose, as well as to such pans of the roomy as may be maccomy on birth sides of the com- mumeanon Gam Toronto to Lake Florae" * ' Carlos ArcM1rva Rerun. INSi P. 379. CHAPTER V PICKERING TOWNSHIP EMERGES It was easy enough to hand out piccolo of land to loyal sub- jecu but it was qui¢ another thing to meet the demands for afymize! government, for mods and for services which mann occur. But It was a finoonal consideration which brought matters to a bend. Revere had been obtained by means of the QueMc assume Act 1774, which never producedcnougb to meet the needs of the colonial government. What was model was an As tenably whnmby We people abi ties themselves, but bassoon of the differences between the French and the new xnlers; and dre meloodes of travel, it war decided to have n Mo one but wnbboa. So Be country was divided into upper and Lowar Canada In 1991 by owlerin-wunul, and each pan wan given a legislative council and a legislative assembly. Tiara was We year in which Augustus focus received his arae to survey the had betwmn the Trent and the Els imke into a urn recombine. cfrecombine.e. Tho township of Toronto was already UW out on pupec Eau of this were to be townships of Dublin, plus grew unit Ef inbnrgh. Jones ran the boundaries of thea in 1991 and although he meonom Perot Said, at Part Hope, he says another of meeting Duren at DU Crock. So itis likely tem the gminl Irishman had already Perished before lona and his star vayo s marked BuRms Crook' on their maps. The Act of 1791 whkh created llppe, and Lower Canada delayed land grants in the namly surveyed townships until the eco Provincial Gevemmems mems established. For many matters presently mtmaud to the Gevemm Gemml were to Be delegated W the new Ucmennnt Governor, Col. foto Gmvcs Susan, who artived in 1792. The plat or idealuPon which she gavemment of d¢ new Prov - home was broad, was the reprodtNon, as fa as Possible, of the Great initial Upper Geotchin the wi d men anumpk of felt mnititmioa4 e the consWuhm wMCM1 he bad van Salomon would W bard m mew. a atroae bolb"r in Ne linointrad going main county lieu nttmlian of planned n old live m It did nm home, comm vxJ well for his council and his civil servants. In packaging Township alone, of the 74,660 acres which the township contains, 18,800 were in II¢ hands of rive people; 0x 0f them the newly appointed Surveyor-Gevefal, two others, members of his family. In ortlm AT obtain it Want of land, certain conditions Md to be L A pence w ling lead would Jim Audit ion the Gwnr, na men U he were approved, an INnr in nnwcd world be sa the snvm eyor-Genal, who land mco, en Ina location Seat and enln The name of the Teniae an A, plan of The IOwnship. Settlers were allowed 2W anas npnn payment of n lee ingetisn 200 acres without payment_ Military men might obmio ganb M is much as S." acus, depending on conk, but it usual to allow them an be in one large break. Much of PiQering Town- ship was takev up by military and "additional man&'— mainly o absentee holders An that them was little land left for genuine seNefs who were prepared m establish homes in the calegrobitol Once The mW¢hed his ticket and had performed his sentiment duties on his Int, be might have his grant confirmed — which rant mat he Was safe Imo fadcmm fw n pMm and mold sell, he4ueath an otherwise, assign Id, sights To Lava a Chir lido he bad gill To Bo IhmagF the process of patenting his land and coming up any oamandmis be Lged Willa sm bad of boot Major IoM Smith, father a the Surveyor-Gewul and Cone - compound atFort Niagua, held 6,400 acres it Placating Township, 5,000 of them in one block, extending far two and one half miles along the lake shore. His son held an art oiniug 1,100 acres, so that when Major Smith died in 1795, the can add a black ex - sending farmthe lake to MyoM the door commucion and broken only by the clergy reserve lou. A map of^ is m the Township before 1800, shows that it met almost impossible for a settled to Obtain a crown gran swung land on, almost 01 held in me name (f relake. dens of York or Niagara. 'rave were o few who had leased land from (]lose accurate owners but because settlement duties were not stncdy stomach, so that a man must build and clear or forfdt his land, there was little in o the holder to have anyone on It, property. And as forthosewho wanted to feat, they could mage condiction and gm a location ticket for another township without ttomuch delay in the early days, so them was no parent for them lease. Thus the land along the Inceshore, except where the survey crews of Augustus lav 9 ar Formal S¢ynan had fun Nair survey lines, was just as the Indians and man it hundreds of years bHore Dome forems rising to Reveres fire the hkefront W the Oak hours mormin, were imported by the multitude of little streams and creeks which joined to form Debts Creek, Pointed O ck and the Rooke River. A traveller some years later wmm of this form[, "f delight to dwell on the beauty of those ro r gmvcs of maple and beech hers, though wards arc totally inadequate to give a cortin idea of their lightness and eleyanw, at the reseal, fairy-like look of their delicate yellow and red limed leaves. We were at first divided in our opinion vwhich was lie most beautiful — the mixed prism of upper, birch and crime Imes, or the sugar-Im5b by itself, or the leaves composed critics of beach. Ultimately we decided in farm Of the batch groves; their purity, lightness, gromfulnews. and airy look, the ultimate yellow and buff of the upper boughs — the quivcdng golden moves, seen far away within the reams of the group, giving shuttle but no yJoom — are not surpassed by coy of heunmaus canoe Nei hat gems. Fee as the ago ran much among the stems,a golden light is su0aced lroN over the ground and ova eeU delicately act and shaped brnncq the shade, if it can be so called, being only of mmewhnt lens bril- liant a hue than where the sun mortars without impediment" • W. H. G. N voice. wulem Roundworms 1853 I'ncFrLhvp slew YicAn{rg raise, —i9wV Thh vers Ibu alight which ma: the eye 'Itrah"l, be If, Parkes MuS III vYno vert o fhe ""it]' nil plants Oci in 1799. He is said to have planted wmc potwoas sad roan, but fur trading was probably his m ucmipetiun. Peak had almost m.i From Hi Tors iP to Pastrami as he was not without exprri. n Pion While killers coup and somtllutue did ere, the township by beat. oars w .... if their oar a to by anything but tenderedwat d tpo, of homunty am am off front sotice of seppf s and, what Is error, our f mareof the tax convent'. The Ilm road wore little mans than blazed halls, nlNouSh Slmmc had e plan for a mad Dundas Street, which would an from the Thames River m Klognon. 'ITe Iia ma of Ibis ad w s abroad 1 1793. In 1795, D. W. Smith'til the Surveyor Grneml, gave Asphalt, Jones imltuctions from Shares, to — "—Girt a horse path from York to Nur of Quhte, as a SroundwoR Im the cominua two of Duni Street, you will soared open into work an s as you have completed the survey eastward of the River an, (Rcii In native Nis road yon will hater Iran cml mpaN m 1110 simm done for its crossing the real which His Emellenry corrosion wll be about two concessions distant firm the lake, in the,event canards— reading off and on that mnoisorm line as a hoax or droomm avoiding to the nature of the measured creeks et to make the whole asaright line as rile curve of the lake will admit — and should you find any countiesto this of in your progress, you must 4 guided by euring cirtumaaws on the spot, having art regard to the Principal view, namely of continuing Dondaz Street toward, Lower flood, by the short- as[ and at the same, time most eligible mumu"' This work was not began at once but Sohn Stegman began the survey of a 33 itroad allowance early in May 1799, and finished form the present junction of King and Queen Streeu in Toronto to Helium Creek by Jane 10, 1799. "tIm remove from this lawn to DuRms Rak bas been came- only chained and mile pons ereaM, and the tamer part of the said mad is on a pine ridge and a favorable situation for a him- way enar ing a lee hills which were impmmbk he avoid" Asa Donfald, an American contractor undvtoot to build she cod 33 tact wide for twenty &time an neem, asking four acres to Ne mile. He was to tale cam sixteen feet and a half whom the 33 Imt smooth and cut nen m the ground, and as near the antra of the mal a the ground will markt and the bridges and ca ways shall be made in Inch way and manner, as sbW be Allowed sufficient, irking real b place Ne bunmenn and string pietts m proper height to prevent the high under (mm taking the covering of." Dal eager building the road in Augua and was reported to have resulted Part Hole by November 22, It wu agreed that be should be paid as follows "when tun miles have been inspemed, recalls, payment for five. When twenty miles are completed, m ve paymem for lea and whams twtl shall be finished for Soni,, Creek, (Port Hopc), receive Payment for half Chet dicani So William Chewed was cent to inspect the rend and the work time and sent in his repos. He found some cause for complaint and said 'The 111I on Ne sent side of dal Five pian (Rouge Rrver) whieb is the]most direult to pass onthe whole of He mm uni- cadon, the commuter bas tanto as much Pain s Iny in his Power to make girl, but with ap that he fes close, cam do, it BO.g.P. Clan ll Pryor, 1956, woman 69, Lt. is lots race, t saw a lorded ox sIM go down with ease, but that was from 16 to 18 dames of new on the ground To go tip this IF in my attend carriages most un Wad, and when the mid hill is rowed with a Our of ice, I doubt mum whether deep, or ropse, to c,mmages held tither go up or down, yet I OM induced so think that drain games me m of a red, o wheel topped by a drain might an,,c,, bar to be balanced or lowered by a tackle wmid ba macn bdmr. 1 tbamfore conclude it to he a good wed r Rend, a a landed sled dran by m may tr ad farm 16 to 1] edam put day, that Iled wlm down firm 3to 40 miles per day, that is no say from (lie break of tlay, to the parting thereof. —Bac wiW regency to a summer mad for wheel nrtiages going post — In my humble opinion nothing can effect that but goad settlement thereon to keep the road in consent repair, by crating out the fallen logs, lumber, and bmsb which will how up at ewy, sl ump arm in every part of the romm. 3ut there new only four settlers on the road in 63 endo. Danforth had difficulty in cold¢dng hissney a originally abeut the nmd Rept warning w. A ro of three was set up so toted on the condition of the road, and reported in Brothr 1802 that Barbuda had and mlened Gs contact and that it would cost Pn,ICD W repair the toad. "Tithe oast and of the bridge over de River Net or Rouge, the suing pia2s having failed, will mi be impeasnble' 'The appear fill M the afd¢mid bridge, the upper part of the Wgwork famous Men bumf by the late nm in the wcWq wall in a short time be impassable." "The mmmunwaina u in many plums from the IBth'mle post to lis Tom is armed ... m ... b1c being motorcar with brushwwd and brambles, and ,any tmrs which hmu rattan once it was first opened eacupt whom it it whil Three uNers ucre mentioned in the first thirty miles cast of Tork,— Palmer at the loth mile post, ]ones at the 12th and Munger mar the 23rd11 The land through which DaNOM's triad ran was not settled because it had been handed out to non residents in large blocks. But there were centers fender noM.•'• hii" mm" vat of Denim Crtek • Nwadflair Waodmff vac on lot Il in 1803. • or Ila of aatlen m pvee Q]). iL;Ib "!, /item It am hardly n m un ul .naw2 uurdm out for a cabin and Nene nonny the 'di mar" nand Nrn mother and m- other ca tbi a whole worry llfnia, It was not a of sae at bar of screwball herder, wild and fish s %Gale the fust miner platoons were protected as well as pmaalhll' from the ami of di rabbits, parents and all the other mof cultivated gory Th, dol books of the pioreers all that stood ham on them and dateat Bat Marinelli, the forest yielhd if the ashlers did net a m,li Ne grapple. Tty 2 4.. i(^ CHAPTER VI EARLY .51-17URS Will Rogers, who was brought op in Pickering, wrote a de - compact of his early pioneer great in 1866. 'In in, fire if... the pinnas fall oNmee to m:dw n yoke of n sled on act, with o n hand as am he mad vs he gox A, no of log, bar,,, and though brooks crack, & xwvmps & aver hills & dale, avid with mum danger & difficulty he al t the mum desired'spug men be goxx to cutting dawn the trees make the only, or log house, anti before he is half ready, perhaps m raise his building. a few hardy sons of industry of tot] mwith a shout that will make the forest ring, & rose the rustic log buildings kind now before it is half finished his wife & chddrrn have to t this ne shod,, ao the oak of years seek or glove their deems is many w ri pis one urogram after l bad moved into the forest wild mw to my early dweliog and c large it,, that IanN .... the I'mare. & one army tem - railcar A emradar,, windy night_that sm, kept no wake Sir in reach din who, tits black a gale took Nat us well as all of this forest AIMIL ms', the trees bowed a, a they court full, & indeed many did, but at on rung over & w oar helpless ]leads unto daylight came; tndpodmp l was vergdedder to see daylight ler then lmon pit any axe and laid it bellowing on the ground hue Ira me tell Nee an dear friendly ,lade,, that tree, often do fall on the a.w butting, & so m es do much daage W to o per, utile,. & edpple people and take life. And ngam when pleasant spring has contc,. the poor man's how, haw to h, tamed out in the wands to seek their own living or came & commovly he w111 get then aril the If ,warned, but i nitres had m hand a Fee to q o put the ,sive &the, brag boa e mod bushes leaves & all for then but with tiro o lea s. & n little milk r roma to ane once good eWvee But perhaps by the time into- summer had come the lows would grow cumlen & lay out & after the poor man had hunted & worried many days, until he was dismuragcd, he would let then' go, & they would mon dry up & do him no more gold that year.& he would be obliged to V out to work for a True butter brand & mm & also lie would work for geceries is stare pony We cut And before l got yoke of oxen, I had to excMnge work, that is give three days work for men & one for oxen &in those days l don, all my chopping alone, but m logging I had to give four day, for every une that 1 got back again &than after that l did get oxen. They would sm'y of like Ne rows & a m might look pvadventom a weak & not fired Nem when be most needed Nw. Our mills, clause, would be a great distance from us,a flood deal of the milling war performed by a bay or a Rile girl, taking a horse with a bushel or two on We back &some strong men, if it was known, to carry mem little grist on their shoulder to the mill others drew s few bushels on a sled or a nmluhW slwk with a yoke of oxen in the summer on the bare fit or, via • Tlrt lvumJ of w4¢ Roprt Sw structure it 'The Penna, people coming Into Canada" write, Joseph Could, "hd hen in LM1e habit of pushing their land wish a mattock. This implement bad an axe aha a hoe at one end. They world cut the underbrush down and pee it in small Items; then they would cut down the oak and other Jorge does. They nest L the buries of line mass es into logs; may the Into Ind ehopryd them up fine and piled them up In separate harp; Nut they on fire to due brush and Fumed up LIn heaps. In this way it would mine a fund hand from eight to ten days to chop an acre. Then it Would Lake five men and a yoke of oxcart a day to dear up from one half he un acre, trump .and iL x'ould Lake a man a day or two to pack up the shanks of word ,ad do the burning of the logs." Etna in, ser rated cleared land orae auto a perks of stump and hnerlacing mon long after We tons attack on Ws forest had M1sn made. Louis Hnnon, writing about French Canada, One us ~common aasapdnn or the analysis to , Make lana". 'fire father end Da Be trek thew them face to face on either Hien of the, tad their axes, Mleal of birch, began to swing in rytbm. At first each hewed a deep notch, dropping steadily at the mite spat for some aetomL, than the ase rase swJfly and me obliquely on a trunk a PoIX higher up; at every Broke a great chip flew, thick as the hand. splitting away with the grain. When e¢ cuts were nearly meeting, one stopped :rad the other slowed down, leaving his ase in the wmtl for a moment at every blow; the men Brip, by so rade still holding the tree yielded at last, it began some lorn rod LM1e two axemen stepped bank n force and watched it fall, shouting at Use tame instant a warning of danger. It was then Ne tarn of Edwina. Legme and &ams; when the was not Insider each trek an end, clasping their urorg hands m ds beneath the trunk, and then raised themselves — backs to ping arm trucking ander the traps — and careful it to the hearcst heap with short memory steps, getting over the fallen mrs with Bumbling effort. When the Borden aeemwl over kavy Tif Pe came forward leading Charles Hugwe dragging a mg bar with n strong chain; this was Pmmd around the trunk and hwanW, the horse bent his back, and with the muscles of his Fiodquarters stmd'mg out, hauled away the tae which Brayed along the stumps and croshcd the young alders to me ground — The place where they had worked in the morning was still fall of stumps and members wish alders, They set themselves w sting and uprooting the all gathering a sheaf of di:mdms in the hand and separate them with the axe, a, accuracy coupon the ash away about be roots and scaring up the whale bush to- ers earlier. The Akdislwma. there remained the sumtps. Flm. ane ele,'onun al bs hm...e 1�1 DemN al IS /mare �o Mrs. Sylvamrt Shanard Ames SGwmrd,Un/I+E£rn0/m Lowlfts Baan and Elksl quacked the smaller otos with no napes bW their ova and swm wooden pusss, They first cut the roan spteadin6 on tae ....face, then drove a lover well Immo, and Mem against the bar. tbmw all their weight upon it WM1en their efforts could not break the hundred des binding the Ile, to ma mil, Barbara continued to bear heavily that he mipbt ra a the sump a little, and while he humans and remained ,or the stain, postal nerved awry Nrioml) level with the goon, sevedny one by alit the remaining mars. A little Nara away the other mm bandied the stumping machine with Ne aid of Chad,, Luna The pyramidalxaRold- ing was put in pine above II ],,go mwmp and turned. the drainm which wan then attached to the not passed moa policy, and the horse at the other end senior away quickly, flinging hintmlf against the tram and showering e',ntb wild ho hours. A short and desW Jtc charge. a mad leap often arrested after a Pew feet as by the mLe ora giant list tbm the heavy aml blades would wing up anew, gleaming in the sun. end NII with a dull stand upon the smbMm woo, while the horse took breath fm a coling with excited eye me word that would launch him rommid again, And afterward then w Still the labor or hauling or Tolling the big stumps to she pleaa fresh cited of back of Still sewed hands with swolkn veins, and slifferium ams that roamed grotesquely striving with the heavy trunk and the nage mined mots.,•• But hoses arts stump pullers ww not m be had w the fret days or settlement. -IIds Heron, Mule mussfulvn The WxMllvn Cc The forest was the enemy. It prevented the sowin8 of crops and it remained the enemies of flemag cl But there were ways of dealing with its inhabitants. "Mrs. Monger of BatRns Crack, in the Township of Plinio, 23 mile, from York, hearing her neighbor, Mrs. WOMmQ, holler vt for help, immcdialtly tone down her husband's an and tun to her .he, she wed there site 1115 informed that v larvw at had take, oil a p into the bash_ Ha m bang shown her it... ho mediately marked and found the destroyer in the act of devouring the arms; upon which she rested her gm on a stump and shot Brain through the head On weigh- ing the tear it Vacant to be the largest that M1atl been killed in the Township" (York Gaining 1805) The WoodruPo lived at Lot 16 next to Mungers and Salmon Fuller is believed to hove lived on Let 15 Contusion 1, a cagy rnsrvc lot which he M1atl leased in 1802. Before the present we of municipal government w doted in 1050 "Town memin8.s" wear held The tum Town do s not imply range settlement in the fie, Town meeting m Ibis area. combining Whitby and Pickering Townships was held on June 4, 1 R03 uta time when there now very few simmers is either mwn- mlp. The m cling was herd at Bamner Mongers at Lot 16, Con session - If, which he lead for a few years befogs m nn8 north to due windy of Salem. At that m tmg the following ollil were appointed for Ne combined metastatic, Gbeneaer Ranwm Town Care John Major Antarctic Eleaeis Integrated AnthonyRummerfieltl Town WnMcns Adam Stephens David Stephens Calmo, Samuel Merger Matthew Devi Jahn McGehen Pmhmnsmrs William Vrek David Crawford David Woyd Feria Viewers Abraham Townsend Silas Marvin Paratrooper [11noAofN, Tm'em. ISOV inch ..hwd) 'ma mor wee ,mcowd wab local problems — me height of fences, the problem of dommde aamals running at large: and as every town locums since. the Problem of usem For the yem 1802, the amount mmincd to Mr. William Allan, listener of the Home Uisnitt was five pounds, nineteen shillings Andii ting m note that this was PaYflarin In full aeemd- ing to the assessment loll. Thom were no ddlnquenm. The first Town meeting for Picketing alone was held in March 1911. At this meeting dm officers for the Town, as it win oIIcQ wells re Thmmm Hubbard Town Gere David Cows ford Assuming John Haight Abraham TownseM Collector Publish Woodruff Thomas Matthews Patbmanms John tuwrenm Armenian Townsend laseph Wuon Poureakrepen TitmWY Rogers John RichaN Town WaMms James Powell N 1812 Nicbolae Brown was made reaessor and lames Lamson, palhmualer. The same offers mo m daring 1813, and 1814 when no Imran meeting was held became of the war. As far az can he learned form record of m ting and the reef of sub and lease of land, the followln5 autlmor were also in the township when the first lawn meeting ,is held in 1811. Crown Leese A. IJavidwn Lot Broken Front 1809 Crown Leax Wre.Hoveard Lot 11 Broken Front 1800 Crown Lease Wm. Peake Lot 15 Broken Front 1806 Crown Lune, An Sunday Lot 31 R.2 Broken Front 1804 Croat Leaae Lend Hamhome LOt34 R.3 6roken Front 1910 Crown Lena Wm. Smith on Laf34 R.2 Broken Front 1811 Crown Lease Wm. Smith Sr. Lot 34 R.1 Broken From 1811 Crown lease Chase Waf Lot Countermen 1802 Crown Lease SaNmn Fuller Lot 15 Concession 1 1802 Crown leas Aaron Senator Lot Con¢anion 11 1802 Crown lease Hawkins WoWmO Lot 12 Concretion 11 1810 Crown Leone Sam. Worse Lot 16 Concussion 11 1802 Crown Lams Larval Chwfmrd Lot 16 COnwAsbn IV 1807 Crown Grant Joe. Ryckert Lot 16 COnseion V 1797 Cmwa Grant O_ Crawford Lot 17 Concession V 1807 Crown Gmnl le. Major Lot 18 Competition V 1801 Crown Gmnl Thin Matthews 4/ Lot 17& Lot IS Confession VI 1799 Crown Gant Caleb Polmer Lot23 ConcessionW 1805 Crown Grant Jmob Waldenherger Lot 16 Concession IX 1803 Caleb and Henry Powell, Nicholas Brown and James Lamom whalso in the township in Irl 1, Thom may have been others ose names am nm mewled in any statement Of rate. bac ar grant or at any town meeting. As Jim been mentioned there were some raiders who obtained their li by virtue of military sc entitled be- es of Loyalist claims and a how, of whom Wm. Peak same to be an example, who had rename been in Upper Canada for a few years and who moved into IM1c new territory the it was upward up. Safe,, an de, American +We of the border moved woatwmd very quickly Vtv the Treaty of Penis (1783) which brought the Revolutionary was toend \'Lincoln armsettled enough to become a share in 179E hhe were year a, tile Cnmtiun,mmil Act which assume the new Pse my 11 Govemments for Canada. Kemncky became a state N the following coal By this time the Americans wam crossing Lite Mississippi in their hundreds and fuming Om inb the Spanish bold termones. It was mat nml therefore that come of the same corium for w land sMwd be felt nonb of tic border. Upper aaada w much neater than the regions of Kentucky and Turn... and the country was practically free of say Indlav menace. The Loyalist migrations which followed the defeat of the British form waw on dwarfed by the inflow of Alumina settlers looking for cheap or at End These people cache encouraged by the government, as c of SiamrcS ambitions costs to populate his new province. They waw welcomed too by the holders of large tract, of land as they presented potential castomers for throe who did not wish to become powering themselves The number of Loyalire entering Refusing Township directly firm the Named States was landlady small. Most of Be Loyahas hod newly groats in the Masala and Clarke Township areas, but n few families w m germed land in Pickering. One of them, Carmum Thomas Matthews seas gill, 350 acres. Lot 18 and IT Lot 17, Concession VI an 1799_ Matthew, mtled veil am kind and wids Los sons David and Pas carved a farm out of the larval. In 1811 Thomas Ma bexs is mentioned s township parting r. In this capacity he am. spwsible for a section of the mad, nu doubt the Brock Read, w this new rwotl. following the high ground from IGnp9on rood north along the oltl Indian tail, was opened about 1808, and bordert l MaMaws (arm on the west. It was improved under the Provincial Act of 1810 and maintained by stature labor. The Brock Road always considered as the center fine of the Township ran from Dundas Strut (Kingston Ad) to the northern settlements sent Uxbridge and joined the road through SmuQvillc surrounding with Yeage prof near Nnrmarkel. Officer emly Loyabsc solders of the reasserts were Townsend at Cut m Concession Ix, Majora Lot 18, Concession V. The Sharrards were later Loyalist settkrs who had gone from the United Seta to Nava Scott, and then came to Pekering. Most or the pioneering was done by groups of senlern brought O the township to organized parties. An excellent cal lc of this type of pioneering is to be found in Ne aeon of Timothy Rogers �y f. . �� �� / � � �� / «. ���±. Rogers was barn in Correlations in 1756. His morning wass very forma my as may lm seen from the entries in his Forms. but his blemeas sense coil good At ninelrcn he married Saab Wile, daughter of Baptist and arm, He marriage hwme, as he says "much ingeriged about religion nod although M1b"ayouaint- Quawith that beepil was very small" he began to be called a ker. He and his wife moved to Dwby. Vermont in 1777. Vermont az then new territory just being opened tip.A few years later IN sold his fn= vad rented land at 5antoga; but Ne purchaser was unable to pay for the Danby fnmm and Rogers went bock to Danby in 1780, White mere he had a turn of mind tbm weed me to tbwke of gang in eer ntry where I cold Sit land che'. And ted more he rough[ about it, the more he became rcwlved to an iL So he thought he would go seven or eight handed miles to the southwest But instead he even about 70 ankles norm of Denby m lake Champlain — about 40 miles beyond the limit of mWement. About 1783, he left Vermont :mal an nm lot New York Stam to buy land. His friends in New York State persuaded him to look at,, hods for them and he was cres n charge of 35,Wo ahis Jordan From this busmen be pars¢me to have made n good prfit as he Pvid $5.000 for a mill in 1786. The following ten years low Timothy Rogers tiding thmah, the forests of Pennsylvania antl New York State, evw him in the southern townships of Quebec; on the St, Jahn River and in the would of Nova Scotia,a rcnlas man who never nems!to be az Noce. Tmmby, following me Quaker radio oval t0air for Ne spirit m guide him and ua Le myv�'f was normal m hew islanders of my not morling to the xand and 1 bad many atilt and hummed days and nights. Ruv as 1 xs on the Lord their ansa very reason feeling carred :nmadtinand i gave a0 nP to his will thinking 1 would do anything that Lc learned and it worked If 1 would make redy rind go im Aimely to the westward ma Lord would make way for me to will 'm the wild. ornow coheir other wait mold Rogers made to Hold Canada, talked with Qovemor Human Chief Justice Halloy, and the surveyor wall Imml mm the Ilan and aimed to bring forty families inn to' new learned Fos Ihia purpose he got grant of forty mans of 200 acres ata cost of 30 dollars each. In May Ig01 he mm'W as [only to Upper Cauda, em yr Newmarket By 1807 luta had hdhllod his a nowt with the ` The around MTlmndry Rogers, No appendlal government to bring in seti and he moved w Pinkamog where Ile bought thatacral from D. W. Smith fur MOO per acre Port ,If It hemg In 1, 13 Ind 10 in the fiat lend second concessions. Duch Gell: flowed though this ppw romty old the cbook of do, nrtam Timothy Rogers built the fild grill mill and sawmill o limlorinp T^..shincm ethmiles up fm rothe Ukeshore of that a four c,old came up and land It hers "bill dor the bid hopes that refueling would be than contmlar glitch encouragedng, In Canada and encouraged Inb, m c cwmhtmmosettle in the habanp and at Uxbridge. To shut a yearly meeting of dn. Salary of FsinWy be gave the,' part of fit, foods for a ,carefully and m c had He brought Channels. Iiaip ltl4 Nwwnwrs Pointers, Powells and othersto Pink emtg Whce Timahy budgets first canne to Pilfering, hundreds of thousands of Salman could be caught Ia Dulfins Creok and the othrlittle awards that flowed into Lake (intent_ But the tell dams, of which lie built the first, prevented the fish going up she rome o slower, and by the end of his life, the had pnuYlcelly disappeared from be region. Timothy Roger lived in Pickering Township buil his tleatb and his family remained ss pinus of the Quaker melanins in the township_ Another type of early pioneer that came into the toansbip at the turn of the sentory was the business man, representW by the mrokeeper. For whit, choir and stores ere later in appearing, staging posts and inns for [trader,, room opened up almost as au assrs as the roads were possible on hoeback. Samuel Munger kept a means near Fisher Creek about 1805. Hotel WOWruR was another innkeeper, and his daughter Melinda, married Jordan Past, a York clockmaker and land n 1796. Jordon Pmt traded 15 acres of life land at the comer of Yon a and Melinda Street, which was named for his wife, and Irak up 500 acro in Scarborough. His comer, George Washington Post came to Pickering Township and lial at Ins 6 Corrasion h whim the Nrge building that he that as on Inn can All be seen on the south side of Kingston Road. Pressure to tighten up entlemem regulmoan was applied by Peter Huston, noting Lieu. Ensures after Som serum to England. He Insisted that fees shanld be paid and settlement duties cniricd out, His milky was claimed and followed out by Lieut, Has. Hunter, who suceUded him. Because of dose sum, vision and the uncertain Position of the United States in ieL titin to be war which engaged Under and France almost continuously from 1793 to blb, Ambition looks probably did not come 10 Upper Common in as bass numbers as ley might have, m view of be fact that it was easy to reach from New York or varia. Thus by 1608 Mete seem only 180 people In Pickering township, 40 men, 35 women, 51 boys under 16 and 54 girls under 16. TNs was 40 more than Scarborough but 13 leas Nan NTitby and 931 lose Nan Markbum. This was the your that epidemics of typhus and measles swept through Upper Canada and carred off many of the center. ( �) � d« »?y> CHAPTER VII THE QVICXENINC PACE no War of 1812-16 had little military effect un Picketing It as fought mostly in far away places — Oucbn —Detroit — xcept for the striptease at Your. Quakers and Mennonites were emp¢d from military cartoon but had to pay for substitutes. There were few township mcn the milli although Andrew HablL is national nal as orewho hewed. The war raivtl prism in Cmtadu and provided many customers for the ins of Post and Woodruff as mldime moved along the Xivgiim mad Them mo no do doubt that it also had a good effect on the Kingston road Itself as what it appears to ham needed in i6 early clays v traffic to keep down Else endermush, and the amry provided it As m an wad aliens were suspects, and mese who mem not prom themselves brat British Whece man considered alien and declared inapble of owning land. 'pHs worked a hardship an many recent American immigrants who had come raking cheap land and were not much cn Bed with national loyalties. But the fan that IM inhabitant n ml,d to defend Canada provided the American government with an Indication of Nc loyal&s of the new wafers in the province. On the Plant hand there most not which a have been war. Prhapll sNnu grnerafN by the skirtisk fshes orth Amar made up the em. %cream Wis Is becauseinBluish. men Americo re were men w only 4.merge Canaromps, an militia m Tema thea were most 5,00Dof file flu nit.H evert e w it az IM1e manors Also dm nceatof me her Rogers and me war did elveso man rlimmhy Meeting feth and h& friends wed mednb gCity 1, Yearly !ino of me Satiety of Friends in Neu' York City In 1815 mvtl IP obtain n travel permit from Llw ELI my. Haiquancrs, York, ISin March 18 13 Permit the underwoned persons of tle Society of Quaccn to pass over from Kingston info [he United States as it nppars they have been appointed to attend their yearly meeting in the city of New York—Philip Darling Jonathan Bowman, Cornelius Blond, Timothy Rogers By command of His Honor Major Geoetal Shalle. Nathan Cieine Col. To Col. Pearson, P.A.D.C. for oMfi rcommaudin_n Kingston. When me mf creed and the Treaty of GhW became eR dive cindi ing ToonJup red endakd a now plmry in Its development. Granted there moor, 9,11 large ammo of land hold by n owaves, but them were Jow a couple ofI.... Not mads and now settlors who Bogan tomine a the dowmMo mould ad Ivot get us Their hold. ing venture tooNmmh dillicTJry. HweI a renewed samse of division betwxn the United Star,, ad Cmada'begun by the Amodcam war of Iodere,ideme, and wwmeul oory try the tradition that the Canadimms hand drawn the Yankees oft British soil in the rewTt WRI This nmd-Aaericankm xvs a strong weapon in the hands of the large landholders and Firmly Compact men whenever it ap peared dant Gnmd was Evening too demaunic; and they did not haimte to um it. Fall s tw oil FrvnkM Clmpname 1871-1954 fells T,I Con. 1, 1792-1879 Probably the greatest e&u of fix deseem of pease upon the western hemisphere after Iwcnty-five years of war in Europe and America was the suival of writers from the British rales. Thomas Reaem Lot 9 & 10, Can 1 Intl facing Riehar n Lot 3, B.F. who nine in 1820 were Ilam ImLnq asvre Alex Dunlop, IM 10, Con. IV, Wm. Hobbs. and OfiwrJohnston Lot 16, Coo. VL Georg, Barclay came !rola Scotland in 1816. Who, Sleigh, n yeacher. fmm England in 1820 to Lot 28, Con. V. ]m. Wetter Ind 2, Con. ll, and Asher Wilson Lot 21, Cur. V. from Use bell Slates. Others who toot or lead afar Ne war of 1812-10 were We. MCCanslanl Lot 7, B.F., Caleb club Homy Powell Lot 6, BF., Vinal.rr. Lens 10 & 11, Con. Is`. Torino. Betts, Bal¢, Coatings, Stiekneys. gaRennrs Lou 3 & J, Can III, L Chapman Lot 11, Con. III, A. Brmvn Lula 12 It 13, Con. III (Bmwas Comers) and lobo Tool Lot 19 Qac. L No doubt then were w others wham munch have dissociation, wow, wall the earlierrmxidema made up the octal papulation of 675 which was remmed by the clerk of the pcam in 1823. A5 the numbers grew it became easier to sell land and the price for partially improved land rose o about 10-15 shillings per note. This was unable the 1805 pace and resulted m a number of sales. When shiers had brought tine population up t0 830, as it wax n 1825, there was mom mdu¢mmat for uupme", millwaghts and other tradesmen to enter the township. With the a and a more skilled wmkms it am bout to hoe butler hougOand furnishings than the crude log hula which had bean the now shelter for many solder. A lag house Caere be built for argot f10. ($90) and at it One; rough by motern standards, it oto vidd shelter from the dembents and could he made snug by proper Chinking and warm by the endleu supply of head wh'¢h was just outside the door. Most early leg houses had one large room downstairs win a fimplam at the end Sometimes a couple of small Indiana, were partitioned oft at the upgrade end. Upstairs, wh¢h was ¢ached by a steep zet of steps or a ladder, wonto be a lime attic room which use probably lighml by it window or pmher too in the gable ends. It wag used as a kind of work room and dormitory Coy the younger members of Ne family. Furalm, w ..ally made by a carpenter, or by the hand of the family, or brought nCss the take from the Sates. By 1825 Ne worst M1adatipx were past, no one bad to carry his grain to York or Whitby to have It gmmd Buts was still a time when a fold w stump studded showing,when potash surer w was s sh crop thawheat and when men human oak, Gg.y sssag G.......a, sersaE -en. John Tow, ,,,qu, Ixn aah, mapka walnut and pi^c Toga to get rid of Nen[. It nor a time when vegetableswere warm, in winter and fruit non existent, but when fresh meet reb be had for the price of one shot. Because bones w and expensive and words almost impassable,men in dry xmta", ships and boats continued to be or important means of tmnspo etion, a indeed they continued to be until the r^Jweys nnu thrtugb in the letter hal[ of the rnmry. Excellent rharbor. Shipp :n MN the Bes and Frenchmen l gay aide for far shipping, while Wlfins' peek w navigable far mull ships it far up ea ow Kingston Roamwas In I825 throw ween Nree t mills in the d onehip, an n Ne Ro^ge Rivet below the old bridgeeRoad. and ove, otiher wa BogeK mill, he Op on Caok a[ Kiogv[Th bun Theane oNer ansa probably ba barley y whit up on began oCiting. come The abundance ce of fins class lumber viiich Soo begun to m e from Nnsa mills resulted in the shipduiltling Industry [a1820 it developed at Hadley mouth of the Poupe_ In 1820 a Cohen She is said t u ave gain shwncr sThe on t of aka a dere. She is said a M1Oe hide the fastest wirer n de lake and w aide between Oswego N.Y, and York, cutting been two he fwi ter of l the time of 1¢r Americ:ui t fly hall ors. During the "Inter of 1n Rewarder, aw Joseprder, m, ,bit, do hull of the "waseda' Ne Cupnln Reba g in the w w be e announce Md w owed to York for fitting In Iho npiinp�of 1976 Theor, Quick hha, wi of Plagiarism' an was . Thew in 3e34 , SPIT... Quick who and to tar on e a .eke. pons anlpe wca to tar pvsongon ave to carry dv mhe; (potwM1), 0emn, and Inmhr Ea, 6ai Enna lhdenng, IA'_ Lhl, miss an, bullish, o1111. m Orwµu w York, returning with cu_ a of hour, mit, little and .mneri crews. Thac were no factories or shops in the tv Ind such minimal, as the farmer mal he either ,out him»II' — m the lag drag ar the barrow. or brought with him as he did his 'ax bad plough. It is hard to margins the 'maturity which a man may d lope when Ito has b make or Had almost some mode whl'l, he times For his soma. Strangely shaped moll feature plough frames. odd brands, oe yokes or cow pokes. His wife most hour, been come m versatile as she did ha me seeing, spinning ,visiting, chase making, baking, preserving and .sewing. In ab iiton to Al this she was called upon to be doctor, midwife, teach,, bad often undertaker In the course of a lifetime, F.'Iiea:I Smt, L. L B... sun ai h his family CHAPTER VIII EARLY SCHOOLS AND CHURCHES In 1791, anyone so wild As to propose a tax on property, for the support of education would ban ban laughed at, or if taken machinery, would Lave been called a dangerous radical, Even sixty years later the term "Communist" was applied by the Rev. John Root of l'oroneo to advocates of free schools. Education war nnkard a matter for the individual parent or for churclws as associations of individuals of like mind. In 1791 half a million army cars act aside for the happen of education in Lipper Canada. But it was folthe support of Barrel Qmmmnr Schools nntl may be saturated to base been more with ring a ruling class than for any purposes of period cdocui1the respired school act, 1807, provided for one such school In each of eight districts. The first carriers had to depend spatial entirely upon their own eyurws m eduen¢ Joie e�ldmo occur n they were lull pped to do this, having been well educated in the United Sores or across Ne Atlantic But in many Cases they had little to offer, apalnlly it they twimbeel m a family which had pool n generation ur two on me Frontier.. In 1816 an act of the Provincial Isoclinic was passed enab- thing common schools. For the Home Dismal, which included fany.one rownship, and stretched from Burlinpon to Port polar. m of Chad sees allocated. This money was to be hard for salaries and books. Nothing Ask allowed for buddng. The ac defended upon the total citimns to build a school, furnish twenty or mre xholams, elect three mem, who would had a Leader and agree tr 10 pay pan of Nat taaduci a salary Mom they could sham n the gram. They were not to across as a lather anyone who mal hand subject or mturathed Fund who had taken Naaoath of speculates. 0 The had wells in gaining Wen of log cu with plants flown and reasons ores around the walls. Uses a box allow n the assume of IM1e nes M1aned the buiWin6 and pupils often contributed Omvood to help pay for Has Iwtion. Farthest schools reco[ds in tl¢ ownership were on the Hubba[d property at the corner of Ne him wnmsion and the Brack Road, n the Wixon property est the comer of the ninth and the Brack Road, one just ants of die Rittguon Road on the Brock Road, a Quaker school just east of Oullina Clock, a Mennonite school at Altana and a Onion School on Ne Rckming4narbomugh Morelia. This school was kept by a big Scotsmu caned Ferguson. home he taught in Ilio ideal which stood at the corner of FniRon Road and Concessions II, opposite Erskit¢ Church. He sums to ban ban remembered less by what he aught Nan by the fre- recent with which ha applied the scows". Early school under, had their problems mo as entries in the Claremont s me mmrds occur "Nat A We rachis has not of late conducted himself entirely to dial satiefMion of the tr they will not ago the agreement unless Me Shamir will engage on his Hart W be more mbu and Monday As his whool dudes than formerly. and will be more cautions in using imempainte language o the chiMmn'. Alittle later finding Nat he is addicted to the "habitual Practise of Mai the to mornings, n and night May decided to "quit ]Ian fats ur':mHis msount suf- fered from the mine failing and he tar won took his departure In fact, school ras show that Ne teacher in most schools d a very almost time, that in tts be any aawas a man of littltee Modifications educationally or n any War reaam. 'Chem were, ficwenq may forms and devoted colons liim and time of Nuc were eligible young Indies, new girls hod to cope with half grown boys who worked in the fields in He rem- and peamred the teacher thins the Ions .wester and it u little wonder that many of Nem were glad to mora on Mare they had finished not me leaned war. one of early teaches in the unship was Miss Ellen Tray who eastm Pickering from England in 18]3. Sbe (Ought shool in this township and in Ux- bridge for several yens before Bar manage to William Michell, fim rceve of Ne townehip. The Tracy, came to Cnnodn aboard the calls Was "EeNet'. Another passenger aboard the ship teras W. H. Michell, who was so ass" by Ne running Ellen that he wrote the following poem in honor of her seventieth birthday: Hail, lovely dower of thy sex, Compammm of tat' was 1 wish tha many glad rauma Of happy 6rs¢ of May. Pardon till stranger who presumes To write this bumble along, for you have known Nm little yet And xill not know him long. Butuwithin the opening rens' New chances each day appear. So mar your share or happlows Imartme from year to year. Ealren Ist of May, 1832 William Henry Michell Her Contract: ••Article of Agrt[menl made and concluded this 3rd day of lune, 1835 between Miss Ellen Tracy, SeM1wl Mlsttns, of the one part, and the untlmsis of life offer pan, now the conditions of this agreement, in Won the said Ellen Tracy agrees to teach school in Forrythe School on Lot 6. Concession 2., of Uxbridge, for the [m of months for 6 shillings New York Car Why for quarter, and boot wit], the scholars of such as wish to base her board with them. Those that wish to pay for added, she will board her - seltforfive shillings, for which she will teach ratling, writing and il and keep such order in her school as she hopes Will sans- fy her employers. The pay wit Be neither the first day ofFeb - sty 1836. Subxriber'a names lamb 1 James Fossylh 2 - Alcoa M. Ganger 1 Susan MoorcU mPhilip WiJcun 1 ThomasDraid Andrew Body 1 John 1 Dead H F[ml 1 IOM1n Cnxlor 2 Davi Hour I thavJames Methodmber tun. I Joseph Method 1 Iodea To mom 2 e no warms[ wlaret Miss Tracy 'sv GQ and the Grnamnr Schooled Yolk, t b the ria kept Macer, kev_Geo. and Sr Yale, and have Gaud in pan lu IM1e uva of dftlmy and ..a nue must the mused the K Sten n,in deal of runto dal es as given as the Revpart GQUK Pi. ening Tiw ship. n m his mlary was gian a gam early in Pickering gs Township. The early seed. Altbodings were as, used on Sedd::hurch the warship of Upper AltM1ough fere flown, nahecol chnrtl,as ed notM1, in Upper ng emp, Lbs uonBr plw for t ins. b included tacit not n strong emphasis upon British innnneon.c but o tact are, mass lollessur ue clam If me raasdbms aullay rarer an the numal If childwu vranmop silent. Mira Elfin TmeS, SNmof Minrca 1832 mnpMn that the Church of England world be the domimaot cli It war meumed Nat Loyalist centers would be Anglican,, but few of Nem were. And although land was art mitle for the sup Pon of the pro¢sm[ chal the clergy "w"c' smo haeme a drum of dissension milanic the few chrmannlma, whim were recognized u Protestant by the Germinated. Many of the clergy who came from Eegland and Saarland an ser to the new piece, preferred urban to mal pioneer life and may he said to M1me ahardaned the Oeld m what they coo- siderod to be arcade, group, The so-called sects were net long in taking up the Gmllengo. They ignored government fai and began holding and has in pine mu arras. At first toes tservicies i re ognoiwa aro hadmak by the worths themselves, won itinerant the prcmhep was to mala batch wry ,omen the country and the Ostep bl build a cM1meM1 or a minting Muse and m have f resident se dome. n e caexclamation,rmethfirst ist re had u such. minister, rte met in Thim, who formed Nc fiad treatment In Nc lownsaker% r in Thootf Flesh, bauu ad themselves, ese pan oa No Yeairs of treed, er Ney ,:Pledriling were , part rk repthe Yoage at the Today, and were according rk Rn 181 remark Them represmletl n[ the yearly meeting in New York in IBI3. There William Dm2aq 7786-IY69 Foumd,, uIDunbanun was no ritual car formal rvice in their church but their strong feeling seof dependence open God and IM1dr civilized woman helped to coummhalance the rough illiteracy of much backav Hs life. From the United gores they brought a long tradition of durable,honedy and cavil speech and may be said, wherever they settled, to have provided a peaceful, pleasant island in the midst of a community which don made its cider ter strong. The Merhodul; where fon circuit rider tended at Use pay n the Quinte district N 1191, wow am long in Penetrating into all the pioneer ties. Dutiesbeck smash wall ng om n who the Re, lemuJ,ck, u Simdondent of h e Mission meaMethodist, fid zero Gnarls Gm [re of New York Som racer hem 1Purofthe VVIlllcII MCNWiat ret Illy, 1830 As early 1016 Lill Mmmdih Church is reported to base had npl n One tilefamous circuit riders to poll o an Sgie ],)I Town ne Job mile east of the four col 1n :m V1111g, z er RyersreYPick,,,- h 1 Mark], card 1111,sambtothe Brock Bond and down to Ou(finC.k and t WGlbg Use support ithe low the ill -st AMm pup pIW_N ong and to the Methodist AcademyU... ety To far Coal evd compleraised 0,lad ttobel Vaona Uovost, had In r o MCNMists mired B,A54 b wL, Ibm nsof card pan e[ this umamn came etho dm o O wof o e stations of picketing. Although the Methodist so Ow of one hundred and fifty years lonn nTiohvn. Ssoyekeope. 1840 RnDen Belts, Can. 11, 1794.1896 Rachel Bells, 1806/890 Ago would ser x any minimal by twesent day practice, it considered to be among mm bruin e moyl¢m : Its day. As name u umber of facings hrclopeJ in the township which waomd to round a Rightly diReretu note. In 1793 a Along w yded from the, Methodist Epicopal ChumA A the United 9mor and called themubes "Republican Metho- dists", Inter changing the nine to "Cbrimians".They weal Joined by suilus I, am the gmsbldedan and Baptize Churches who Am afitmr had rvhh their own chanh organization. They had show mmlimsel "We am Canyon, to the excision of an the nanos of faction and pony. The Blbk is oar rile to the setting of all creed, caymans. disciplines and articles of faith ever prepared by unicified man and imposed upon the chmi Christinl amour et istest of fellowship and earn- motion o the exclusion of all shibboleths of party and tests of bigotry ever urged upon the humble followers of Jesus Christ"- Iutire spCmO of 1624 Elder C, Morison of Ne Christian Church visited Pickering for the first time, and by July 25th a group of people was wady to mcwis a church aaording to the new plan. "Past Ymrs in pkkering", has tire following: "A P¢md of the Ush of Crat in Pickering Up Crunch, Be It remembered that nn the 25 July in the grein of our Lard 1826. A few lJreWem hewn or No met 'm fellowship meting at the house of James ground. Lot 21. (Can. Vq in the town of Mckaring" bloomed w a United Empire ra tiler who had me from new Eastern 'fmvnohips of Quaba, M2. nM was a pillar of rho Ch isrian Church) While the brefhern rejected all previous creeds Nry still undertook m discipline their ow embers. Fur on 16th of January. 1828, a charge was brought against Ito. Manhets by Jas. Thereupon for drinking too much liquor ;it Smith's mowing bee aM `word the experiment of bear to keep sof "In the same year there was a complaint ugninxt brother Sly whose wife dead that he twit her by the halt of the hard and utensil her out of bed and shook her and M took the chair that he sat in and aware by his maker that I¢ would knack her down but did not and he timed her out of doors and kicked her." The brgbarm withdrew fellowship from Soloman Sly. The Christian Church at Oroughom rumored many new mean - bars inthe years that followed although it soRerel, as all Amari- train- inspired institutions did, foam the bivemns which commerce - led the 1937 whether Baptists in the township were affiliated at first with the Baptist ChwA in Markham, bar by 1821 had developed a separate or - genistionin ns comer Pickering. The Wines, and Johnmm were traders in the newly managed congregation, the organization meeting brand been held at Wixovs. The rmords st c tient the mason far separation was that me Wiaons nor nsou ryrying a salary to bider Birthday because they considered it um,miuml, "as Christ says that an hireling with of for Na sheep because he is an himliog and not the owner of thexhku,W, But whether !Itis be the reason or not. (hem =is soon twenty monhus of the new church who mat for worship as houses 'I his congregation w related to two others offer, war, mism,ed in Whhamrch and broader. The Baptist Rn. Adi Glliau and ;in /radian ,he — /830 Cni bailing which war built on Lot IR, Can. IX, was not completed until 1851. thirty years after the congregation bad barn organized, Meanwhile another group of anthers on Concession VII, who had mrivca in the early intone, built themselves a meeting Louse. MINUTES Or TR. AALDL.'A.LR:DI [DISTRICT Or NEWCARTLE1 BAPTIST ASSOCIATION, HEAD AT MARxnAN am TRE TutnSIE'Tn AND THIRTY-TtRST JlWWART, ANN FIRST M FDRRVAIM, 181E I. MET it Eleven O'clock t. N. Elder ARRA' AAa STOOT, delivered the lutroductary Sermon from St. Luke, 19 k W x' Svioe eD finer Ina tllestrnitgatei for man"I say can; yea, m3( reek to enter in, and ekau nw be abJc" 2 Chase Elder GEone:E BARCLAT. Modern - tor, and Brother isenc N. EEan, Clerk. S. Letters tram the Churches Were read, RMI the following Est taken. The trustees, Wm. Tarry Sr., That. Gostick Sr., Chas. Noncan. Was. Winter, Geo- Stokes, Sam Palmer, Wm. Torrey, Thos, Cusick Jr., Thos. E, "Racy, Alf. Garber and John Gostick, opened the place of worship on Aug. 16, I835. Those men wc¢, far the most pan, immigrants from England and their object in putting up a building may be read clearly in the deed. They lived in a strongly religions atmosphere in England, and tried it, bar they could, to make provision for the same kind of rommmdty in their new wilderness home. 'rad unable through then' eimighaned circumstances compost that, weak thry made known their to dome ,hrmbum Inrnds In Rigi who fami,ad that with the am of BeaBoards matn [hair desired object m that athaving been dorm by fomdnand rel,[ecomment] antl with Mr_ Who [racy, and z or ban oI. in mMimtly meed a piety of ground and created th"u, bashing, whim Wilding :mat Broad formal de, , has be,, by him wshol so the hands of waves m the maim, and to, the vrysse espmsmd in the deed —The north ma corner of lot 24 Correction VTI — `Thc eohwl mom or ramming home Be apProprimed as a place of morning for Diems worship viz: Preaching the Gospel, reading the Scriptures. Power, and Slming the Raises at the Most High God, and also for the Religious Instruction and moral improve meat of children or adults in the neighborhmd. And in pursuance of these chances me Trustees ore to feel themselves bound to avail themselves of the resistance of such well disposed and pious person, as may by Divine Providence be placed within that, reach, especially those who arc humbly and faithfully devoted to the seems, work of pm¢bing the doctrines and prcwpe of the Gnpel of Christ, by which is meant those ecen[ial and im loan oruths in which the venerable Reformers and Pmimas, ,x Wick- liffe, LothCq Calvin. Camara, Owen shad Godwin w m agmed, to the exclusion of Shearson. Antinomian, and Popish cmm% This Ilmlmtion being introduced as much as possible to powers do ex - means of fit, anomaly mentioned by our messed! Lord of a Hoagie divided againstitself, and not with any sectarian mothers The ewes will therefore hall with ohusum the meeting together of Christiana ,r Preachers of different denammonans, whether Independents or Baptist, Presbyterians no EomgdicW members of the Established Chmcbos of England or Scotland_ But the Trustees will not pledge themselves to penmi[meeings to we held n the said School Room or Mroting Hous, for the mroussion of political or spealadve questions, or subjects not revealed in the Holy generators' Pir threat, IFrivinF under He ministration of Rev, Thomas xpeect m O gonad lorders became part of Clmemom Oapllel Clmmh el to 18 gonadal mi settlers Mgan, th eemc into " Chuch in o Ne Imo d sent and h minister to ce in the Sn¢ymon ter Do of Scellvna sent Out throe reinsurance w Jon beg yew lama Rev_ t is s national ived in Goadv and soon began work y who is still known ns Tork to the Coraco in in a my Towmhi d He ed chis on ed his work to ehe weswoM,in a manwr best described by his gran pe¢ "With the exception ie a smith hn from acontinuous d along dm mmMm frontier, n flew a was men a vol warrelyuo —The datings were re &w and far h[, me ¢[ with of m interrupt the may were mo the future re T e for was me with a rely meptions. Nay wcm yet in the future. Thc mod was made smerely &or - by emting and othreat clearing off e Ne Irca which had they its was face. To ble m the Ealy hof meg meM1 az they we incompatible work with JFc objects of tM m ough and thenaturepaths and of m work. to had Ji wend nor way my ma a Of locomotion ocuand from clearing b enation, where do only ooh lb g place i but on mm. field has men AvI only evolvement armin dweNng place bur c mania felt sbefore she os, Avoiding had iny like inroad, upon the few facilities quest shoes the gospd had tarsobtained a t the we prceeehd in gout of Prcsbymeiea re to b wood the leen wedLrw i would be lion m m wlwre theContaining were es be Guy, or justther would ee So bio Commie wad wrulves to Gab am just ed- amntl where Fe broke no our rvay" v On July 5, owns Township Nat Session of me Pmes Going s ach ctczk in Pickering Dunbar d J hnnstituletl or James Greig as eve, held William Owbar and John Agnew as ship in I X.mb. were held in SRev. Lys Thoma Two membership c Fent,to r wu viyhmvn. Sundays at Squire n wasengagedo miniver to Con@ alhmam Sundays p Squire Lays and try) at a M1ouse on Com Cossion Il .(Tress Wm 2eskim r euro have m drawn fromeand vi fP5 per ter in:n. Thc congregation te:ie m Fnve whol from Cioas tenon in the prove in m hoteliemembership Bartell in 1 lived in Others on menon VII appears on to m ourts, is roll in op, J hn Gr on c Court list me RDun Cozens, JToI flysl,Jean John Greig, Jean Courts, William Dunbar, Helen your, Icon Knox, Leon DIaII, David SitWilliam Mc Quig David Southern. James Greig, David wot, Rachel Park. It was during ma se a period that the do Church Pic ri England comemm being area organized congregation in Pidsrin6 Tawn- Rev. Li 9'1mrnun —1115 Ship. For ahbomgb it war the endowod Chwch, In the mem of having Lind set open me Is rase, it NmReed, an did all the otheq from a Shoran of clergy. However in 1833, par. Adam HNod tramllW through tin township pmxMng, and ante a more orma Inc itinermy was established. Rev. H. H. O'Neil vinead both Maturing and Whitby an 183fi In 1841 they were united at Inc Charge and the first incumbent, Rev. John Pem and, was appaint- ed The twoammegans counted to operate as e charge mobl scpamban cd in 1864. The Romeo Convene Church in Piellering was not fault until 1849 and Incomes to that time Catholic families — the O'l.earys, LW ], Con. IV, founds, Lot 4, Con. TV, OConners, Lm I. Can. ill, Garlands, lm 33, Cen. III, Catlins. Lm 14. Con. VI, Rev - Little Lou 26, 6 P_ McCarm; Lot ], Con. IV, and 9mIN; Lot 26, B. F., had to in W church nt St. Pmuls in Toronto there being e chisel. Several young children of that period were carriedby Neh remems all the way to SL Pools for baptism. In 1841, Father Korvin built a smash in Cahalan which shortened their journey a little. The lapse in time between the eAabGNhment of what might be called spontaneous or contain and the man formol ontl criminal deamination is perhaps. iinicnlive, among other things, of the btugromds from which then members cams. Thom who had bad a generation or two of pioneuin6 in the United States set about oryenizin8 their own churches almmt as soon as they had the fire few acres cleared, while those who arms in from the British Isles seemed to depend on outside help — a ravelling monetary oto pift of money from abroad — to far chu¢h going, 0osh poRical parties were not organtred on particularly door lines during the period before the 1837 mbellien although there we c plenty of political meetings, this bring dm Only form ofsocial gathering, open from going to church, which did not include a good dell of hard work. No doubt chopping Uses; and bum raisings wem oc®sioes for exchange Of views and nmplaina about delays In obtaining patents for mm, ar better mads, but it was at the publical mostiegs, where spoken from Whitby and York told of the activities of the government and its civil service, that the mthusissm required for outright mbenion was developed. CHAPTLR Ix PICKERING AND REBELLION OF 1837 Peter Matthews was hanged for taking part in the 1837 rebel - lion.Bre Peter Matthews did not represent republican met mvols. teary ideas. He was a solid Pickering farmer whose father, Captain Themes Matthews Jim idea an About in the British trey, discharged at flow add of the American Bevelmionary War and awarded 350 acres of land on the sixth coMession ofPicker - to_g Towmhip. He was grand pa i master at Ne first town mettin in 1811. But it may be in Nese Iwo fear that there has reason enough to be dissatisfied with the government of 81r Francis BondHear In the het plane, .although overhaul Itis holding in I799, be s homed in take land five miles from the 0ngston Road and night acres north of lake Ontario became most of the intervening land belonged to embers of the Executive Council or their families. Ia the second, the fact that he was chosen fixate star raid tem that an insight into the ralrictions which Ne Parisi and Town alhecn Act of 1793 imposed on those reamed order its travelers By this A,[, wy two Justices of the Peace could sarcomas Ire constable or any phish, township or place to a amble the inhabitant houmholdI nethe firt Monday in branch each year for the pattens of chat deak.I eelleand, alum a we ersue,), a stain or evicemn aI, IncaYK rIAN magna), fens vi a pound keeperappointed and m wardens Itwasthe duly scof- f ek w appointed h send tau net the Fissional dider- ed The ins of 'a and r of refiners a ed at mined by the tProviver, minicamera, The ohne npeeinted he Ne tow egiinga es wonly Ila tory m oe Jun of the Peace o magistrates. The only Im idativd parvo given fe the Inbebitanr'meating was b ddetmine the hzeht of lsafifl Fences and to decide if, and when, domestic anil should M allowed to run at large "is world explain the repetitious nature of IM1e bylaws passed by early township meetings in Pfuhrim Township for the oily matter, %Inch aeread to ,adorer the faller, of the ppromp wee thaw concerned with fenantl hwe9ock. Yet however small might be the authority actually granted, the wry fact of Hair creating and chomion dicers and climbing Ne meag¢ powers town in them, imdually c e people of wrong democratic tendencies a kern desire and greater ability for self-government. When they met, discussions cmued rules of doing public business were evolved, and men Were constantly brought to think of the necessity and adamitage of lmal admini- Notatlm. AN towns and wilms, grew in sin, many of them were incot- pomted under ordered and srccial Acts of the PronncilFc4a- intent and accorded powers which wen not in the Act of 1793. This brought void a Reding, current in rural areas, that in s of self gown meet they ere under a disorderliness as on pnacd to imam olatars. e full and careful Ludy of the "rMers" of the different District Coves of Coulee Sessions, would do wry much or explain :rod justify Neit which w so prowlent during the mat mthea mua nd mete drum sad refusing authority the Court of Second, was mmpmW of dee Mminmts of lira Din pu � All the blic fends veil::blr for the brother of mads and M1ridjew waste In the funds of these Night or ten men appointed for life by Ne _ w. In the ani of mads and bw ridge, they w interstate and in nmpetmC they nnhhm knewthe needs of the Da snormally an supply them m make them moll ruled W open no a new euwvy. In thematter of foods and mM1ur pubba work, these road, am veand wilh larder authority. They presented plea and c for the bolding of gaols and mm home, o1 wlmever thlurndons they dwared ht, reacted theft handsel and ordered the people tb pay the refuse, thus seemed. Their cerebral also nrdemd what fare the onsoters Award pet and contracted for the sapply of intensities; they onkrtW what fees He Dldwt 011lw shruW rgethey had control of public cbadly, _ . l ides this huge should, aumearity they might Wrote upon almr say mor le of Irower: and no v willing Or ends planar make Woman of their actions. A body ofpublic officers with such large and unrestricted powers would aw be considered _ [what dangcma, even if its members were annually subject to popular K.4 Ctaw[md. Clerden On011uel Cm'emmn:e Page 26 :Wer Bod.... tried 1W chadon. hit Iltc IIQ,I[IIr,, who examiled Ilwn powers in Quarter Sass..... w... Nc appointees of the Qavem� and of bad ve serge quaWicadoa for public oll4e. Many of them wart .Id mons ofi¢r; and most of Ncm arm at aWOelent income A, rend,, them indifferent to Na hardshlos and wants of the annme btl working weaker .• The marmot in p,pminion in Pickering Township Ilam 675 in 1613 to 2642 in 1835 Pat national pressure on a system of local government which ',,portends had critically in fulfJli.gitsobliea - mch smaller population. h is not hard m immune ma demand it lfor roam, cad bridges which went unheeded At the level of pro ...rhd government tM some held arra Tim mwvy was tilling up quickly, applications and demands for land into,, •L AL Micros. tee Onwrlu iax,nwp 0 eaaea is Qaxlam. oup.dr. page 27. transfer$ and sales were Pouring into the registry office and the delay in Processing and issuing drum, when contrasted with the efficiency of the tax collettor, must have led to a good deal of tl1 Over and nano this there w among the n otters. a Mmg Over lm Bdtam and z kwledge of theademands for reform widen were being pressed on the govemment there. In the all of the rumors there Samecourts to the British Must code which remweA me death act from 400 oHevees. Many of die restrictions me Catholics were removed in 1829, and from 1820 until the passing of the Reform Actin 1832, there was mm uws antl growing demand for ao extension of popular repremmmdov. In IM1e year Nat the bill was passed there were four mass mmtirre. speeches. rallies and even rims in support of is At the same time the Taws forbidding workmen to leave the Under Kingdom, which had Men passed to coneverve the labor force during the Nalmleome Wars, were repealed. and a Mem of new mmigrants came to Camara. Edward Phillips, Wm. Donbm. the Anvam, Trials, Ullchrims, Wilkies, Bmwvs and Lawson, Vincenm, Gonicks, Winlem, Palmers, Benners, Osboums, Bless. Famous, Poachers, Mdmyres. Reynolds, VeMons, Wilwus, in Pickering Township were among the recent arrivals and many of them w m Refolmns. Some of them were Orangemem as Wein the Gordon brolhera of Lot 19, Broken Front. But perhaps it was the mcmah making and rallying around the outlying tliuncu that gave McKenzie else iden of .singing a march on Toromo to demand refmmx and no doubt for many a young fellow, terminated by the talk and the evidence of his own eyes and bored by the Mrd IaMe of Monier life, it march on Toronto Seemed more like a lack than ,serious military undertaking. The terrible fimw which resulted may be laid at the door of the dividxl authority and imecisivenes of the leaden and the Iwk of proper tr ning and discipline among the collowers. Joseph Gould, at one shoe n member ol'do&riding of York Caudy, has own a triturator of nn elacumn of the thirties— The Gomm- rnl selected the places of Nomination in the eonulmmemios to is die si,es. Tax plain thus selected became the places of Polling, and us there vas only ane Polling Place WMyx d for eah riding, the poll was kept open for a week ateand !m qucntly larger_ The law was that she Poll should time, ekept open as long ns votes WfcrM, crashed an humeri of an hour did not Mi without vote being polled. It was only necessary to Poll sledge vine each hour in order is prolong an election tamest. It was the season in which the tavern kcepers reaped a rich har- vest, and it was a common assume with this class of gentry to It i P OV v, Joi Gordon, Oreigemon,1837 Mld a number of voles in reverse, Wagon them up rale at Time within IM1e hour when necessary to keep the contest going on. It was also Ne practice of the candidates, who expected voters from distant townships, to keep aw If they were WNnd, this mum was drawn upon to keep theWriteup, so as W allow me for the arrival of their reinforcements. It was IM1e presence Nen for candidates In kap open houses, providing recruit and accommodation for their supporters Them was no restriction o the sok of liquors, or to Imanng. And as might his swiveled, them move public houses were bible spots for meeting printout crops of violence and bloodshed. Broken heads and black -eyes were ordinary events. And sometimes men were maimed for ISe or were kilkd outright, at Wase scenes of strife date,- eco airliner contest. The constituencies were very large, some of them as large an area so twof ours. The settlements were new and very much centered, and We roads execrable The amount of Receping and pulling and hauling required to get out the "Irce and independent" voters emailed ananaerobic ot of hard wink ... The Compl mm had long been a theme to the possibly disposed at obstruct and, armed with bludgcum, and sometimes ma arms, used to lake possession of the 0011; and they subjected those who dimmed from uric in opwlon to all kinds of ILL ve n p'• The discontent while nor m,cial wera, t0 have Oman wide- spread In the township cu ms lives of United Empire Loynlish Fng1i$ h iso rem ish :rad American ubiem and down through the Wide 0l churches set Wal while the tern Radical, or Reformer earned with ito[ Anrcricernism o Repub4camsmt itis yrobabtMwmo navy of W. L. Mckmocs idem bad a swung republican davou and ba'aer, it ws,fashion- abk among Hngnsh colonial oMcers and Costly Gmwct Anglo- philes to adopt a mMeseMing mdtude an both the Americans and the backwoods Canadians who made up the greater part of the papulation. The edectlooeering of Sir Fmrcis Mond Hard in 1836 and the round defeat he admiolserwim The more modwase reformers brought We homages to the fart and iuctumed their determination to d0 something. Meanwhile in tiro Township of Pickering mcetinas a[References were hold in the taverns and trnimg under the guise of market double was being dove In various parts of We mwmMp. It seems doubdul that mast at those who assembled north of Toronto in 1937 were clear as to what they were exomed to do. Many perhaps thought that he cell was for a slgw of fame with vout bloodshed When Mckenile held his secret heading in StouQ- ito on @c. 2. 1837, and passed out envelopes of instructions, the result was that captain Pater Matthews gathered up his for low¢and oro b m Modgaerys'u to n Yonge St. (near r the present intersection of Elliman Aver): Mandates and sixty man o burn the Don River bridge, s than would be the way is nwmmh reinforcements front Scarborough would mach Toronto in support of the government. While this was game on the what, an Yonee Street capitulated and fled and Matthews card his men seaward, took to due wool and hid in the Rosedale orange. Here they remained for uveml days until they wren form 1by cold and burger to walk to the W. H. xryrin.. hue sad amu a Ralph Gema Temmn 1e61. PaR m home of Remit James Duncan. close to the German Mills in Marklvm. They had dinner and it mane skep. During the night rise house was surrounded, Peter was surprised in his bN and although it is said that he threw his captor against the door sidle still in best, be was ovnrome and taken to the gaol in Toronto. Hem he was kept while his name was added m the list of inset gents Nwg removed by J. B. MMsuleg Staretary to the GOvaT no - and holder of 50 now of wild land adjoining Mmthuws Lmn. Madmws and Loam were condemned to death fuvr o although over 8,000 People pnom ed for their ecau, William Lyon Mckenve said a him, "Cap. Peter Gustavus was a jolly, hole, cheerful. ebony chmeked former of Pickering, who limit on Me own land, cultivated ors own estate and was the father of fifteen Cuban, who pawn ed the Sullivan, the Dort and the Robinsons in ,in for that mercy to their faller which they hememon mut ym implore from a just God. Capt. Matthews land fought bmvoly for Eric King of England in the war of 1813, n of m mined reputation. well beloved by his neighbors, scanning, modest jn his resources, a baptist, nnfncomy m high elmr.M1 a undanry, a rare pri and infignind at file treacherous fraudulent centime of the dnciends Lmn, who in 1837, Demand Gnada. I often got his vote for a seat an the legldwas, and ulwuys his approbation J" Der Matthews w the only Toxalship man who was Water. His protein w s then confirmed by the government and Hannah, the sad wake, and mother of Peter's fifteen children, left wild nashlnv. Onu or two of the older children remained in Canada, but the ran.. i with their mother left for be United Smem, string in Murray,. In 1849 the property was returned to Ne family who roused it to David Matthews and eller modems until it was add to ilia supernatant in 1865. Good Mnnhowx x e fortunate Man his from, and amcm by Racing to Pickering and biding in a stow stuck until it s safe to return home. Others wrt, not so nobody. George Barclay, TovwWdJ Wixoq Randal Wixom, Asa Wixom, Johnson Sly, Intl Wilson, Thomas Sly, who had been disciplined by his church for pulling his wife's Fair, John kind, lames Brown, Asha Wuson, John Rmsenia ill Revlon Wixuo, Ira Andersen, Thomas Tray, Thos, Soared, were arrested and Randal Wixom, James grown and Ira Anderson mien rwiin a number of fans crs from other vans of in,, colony wam transported to Etgland n chains. Benjamin Wait,, ono of the prisoners de criMl the sway -fans day voi "Worn the whole number, including E C faults Low sad 11.11 If l ne PRW0. diseases K. was d70 venty three suite limitations and eleven felons had beat mamhM and sent below together, and the Imp or batch of The imn gads Inked down upon us a Beene a draft nion and tumult commenced which begins dexnPlfon The shams and currom as the follows fighting for winegrower mmglul colt theelanL"mg of chains, aided by IM1e frigid chilliness Of Ne atmosphere and the damp fetid smell arising form the bilge water. cleated mass sensations of IT end dread and ambitious . For my own pa1 felt dam The WI trials of life had arrived ... Then I would base Oven worlds w have containers my life upon the polar Some of IM1e prices who had Leen socia d in Ca oda were mnshipered and went on theirway to exile in Van Dreman lend, others were taken To Movement prison in lass Some of these particularly Americans, were later semyroded To lq while the practices. ha udirs Wimp, had their cam taken up by interr ailed Englishmen. While there Randall Vision words: his family Goat Newgate. His IeRer is addressed, Me Joseph Wiaon, 9 Con. Pickering, Home fiyrim, Upper Cards, Brougham Post Office. Honored Father, It is wo years This day fins Queen Victoria firt amended to the throne of Great Britain. shove half of which I M1ave been impdemed bxaase her repremntal in Canada mfumd to Her subjects there, the site of fnamrm Bonds sabjare, I brief, any bran in England roneTM1ing more than via months using every eodeavwr To gain that justice bare which was denied me in my own tory. I M1ave no doubt every step taken with ort proem.. to ming here will eventually ve ally proto be perfectly o tonal and illegal frobegnammg to and. But how long n spay yet be m bring it fairly w The m Tom, c show. The Government have had my ase before them for nearly 4 weeks and am yet macaroons — IT "plass how TO reform Ai r and hung on upon me and my fellow products) dust which am worthy of the Royal clemency I orally du not expect any thing from IM1e merry of the Government. But from wb- mining the Jule w a Parliamentary mwetigmion, 1 have hopes of succeeding, and always how had, The foundation for such ars ordeal Is now laid. On the evening of the let, Is LOM Boundaries another a peddan for myself and fellow pdmners in tlas House of Lords; Accompanying the promotion, with a vary Intl, though mmewhat starexpmitioo of our illegal mos . for Jr. nmm.of Lem, modes 11 L, C. yonaT, nor am, felt 20, VYlui'Ci fl ui]mm Pi4tmeer lu Eaglnd. (Hun Jul IV hmy 6Ji lww IeIO inew. on the owning of the 18th. Mr. Under pecacred it Counterpart to the Nouse of Common, rweriing his remurkx for Tuesday the with Inst. The G ...res m deemed answering Ford Brougham simply saying that our cams were on@r the cartel area of the Government and That they aid not wish anything mom saw shoo t at that time, and so me matter fens. 1 have go quite unwell for svernl days and haw been mixing medicine, but I nm getting somewhat better than I was, —1 will give you more pamenmrs as 1 team mem daily. so good evemne. June star Well goad morning Father. My health is yet bot very indifferent. 1 shall monsieur to over no agniet sickness and sorrow and confinement as well as I run i do not think Wert is much danger of being war for further; — but 1 do think it runs probable that I may be normal hack to Carl either to give buil, or to stand trial for High Treason. 1I the latter whould turn out to he the rase, 1 shall die on the scaffold cheerfully, rather than submit to transportation and the degradation of dssiging out¢table imnact w in foreign slavery, Yes. Father, after all that 1 have suffered, it would be worse than contusions to shrink from any death that could he devised — By de, Iry, why don't you write, What are you afraid of. You never write me a single now, w mote than if you was or fore er world. 1 do think this is loo bad. So sector this. Good evening. June 22nd 1839. Well based morning, i huge you are well; I am rather hider this morning, though considerably out of Gear arm _— have a slow imveM fever— not confinW to Find — caking medicine. 1 went you nW to fail answering this, and telling ne, all about the whole of you, not forgetting to ttll me about my own family. Write without disguise at it will wine as me unopened. 1 wry muoh fear there is something 'notice at home, and I have reason for it. Therefore let them be no mvaby, or crowfoot ofanything. 1 Im very unwiring that any wrong imprewiwS should rest against me; and I should be quite as unwilling to in- dulge in anything of the kind agvnat any other person 1 haw the Six Soverelgm which 1901 from W. MicM4 ovept 15 pence. I am in hopes of having enough if I.tlwuld be liberated M1erc, to take me near to New York in aeote, on twice, if n my more, from which place 1 shall be able to make my way home me how. f am not without hopes of this yet. and I shall lie, on prison allowanw (though not very know for a person in bad health) rather than exhanu my hNe seam. O Father, you base no idea of the gainers of year unfortunate — Imprisoned is a fortim land, And all thin without having committed any real cr Gas. It iz really a hard ¢. But Gad is good and will do all things well; and aauu it all he work for my bent good, It 1; heuewec very hying in the mean time. I do nm 10yeat to call upon GW in my Trouble, now do f Inch proof that God Mars prayers and Lambency, Amwem. Goad Recruiter June Sdm. Groat morning Nothing inoro whim can M depended Phone M1m ret come to my knowledge. I aninstant! by Rev, Da TMtnwn no that Mn Ludnr had ... t praised his urprtr ata LLaHru of Cousin but rvhM1dm he modmble not Know certain a most be a mtharmm ul motion for flood. t i 1 think he must hate lemned something m mnpeedt the of Got a ale i e, 1 u not r think funny Chir of Ih putatthe r q I Buell mm he surprised at any thins that happens ober enemy eafiuingn. r bemm In mlMq Mnet. caaa day. Me Jet. cool mo sing Well here I vat yet. The weather has ea Mer been all shivering chitim i toted err mer aha h moan a in we have been allrli with the cold. We beer wei m fire in at Larry since early in May. I neverIreember sceiag noeM1 drill[ that It in July before in my life. 1 really think y a linin two or that I can hearnothinglin fated you I havewhen nand written two or three letters o week since I was in Newgate end gat Done except n package from Roth containing a letter from UsuArnie Joshua, hisis one fmm Elder Marsh let also. a gm one from Annie. This in ell. pull mat I suppose my letters are g.wordslleave wete m and I shell soon not they van ml an a wining. J from you. made tip my mina not n. wine any mora Bata f bear from yar Gm oebl. Joe,yesterday 'ad day Goodmorning. an Lord John (powers) forfarracbuck yesterday at s onily we banal a (pnm go o Up Craig, tlu what unity w Dahl bar Roebuck meso backed, Upps Gwrin or thenotex Bute.To tour anr. othertanro`Mylan, you cannot expect then to Sive any other than unci[ awn per banal wind Pot *la it; as Meir nm going s t Gnatla, 1 think they would not *law i t but err m Irmi eno ble. to Sit to Nc bond StaJohn, will think muhat is more n enable." swell, aid let a know s you communicate h Mr, Roebuck the lied in the act me know she reselldi to whirM1 oe ck conk relaietl in the and requese.ted And accordingly our o t. Roebuck called last evening Whichrequested in he stale bar wishes upon the subject in writing. Wxich we dna in 0c following noir, In joy. 1809. Sir We the andenlgned an.nnoo :n Shapiro bee leave m start. in nilly to mem mbmmed to , than m of our being tuth set aI nny, we avian order inn, rreogni.m:w, rot any sao that ropy be deemed It mu I, mona to the Province It DPPm Convaa, hav rm at presentin�na o do s We ME, however. that those all be or nbmt to our ask- ing any a..ngenient want the Colon,,) Govummenl hereafter. allowing our return To the Province. Signed= John G, Parker Randal over, Lennard Watwit Finlay Makohn - Paul Backed Robert Walker In, A derson debts Blanc deal sea, diagram Naos. IN, H. Ashman, Fell We have mare nothing from ens as car Ilan we sn a nim from pother quarter that the Govemmwt had nearly concluded to Ilbvr n binding 11 10t 11) go to Cam:du ill the Stut of Nov York _ 1. R. AToronto ce Soup of Toronto en see Mr. Parker press, by when, Ire heard that Dr Simulate came over With Ibim w6n u now of turn¢ nude a Bishop. And, also had Junes Small is II I hope is lllll be in m we m r, My may servic alowlr. we am all m rSo cloud spirit, you. you . may wen aarnme. sn enna msm to ren:. IDh pn/. It ced us folhm Ne Dom-mr,ml urgau The Morning CLmnlde". it mi tra been round in cul iruble I,, bone the gin", I Phe Pud to trial It Englund f cunlonnirt ale the maceird he In the edup theminem of that, Cupp n( ii,M1eWen the Goo m k z trined w them that upon o pe Wren .. not net to return m uch da,ind they ry front nt role Car o we nave not yen t1 hied any such a pa tram me en.. common dirvdrop ed n the c it more then tpmw walk enc we shn11 bvrn to dropped I in the Manu of the next utak-11 m, a chap to be Canada in a few dura ndnwicted but I da not that I In return ro Canada a t:norc: and indicted J cannotsay man 1 desire a an o, for a non leen men hnt 1 am cup be able wwoad. m a coq i[ I get back m 1forIAmerica, I rand 1 shell be able to pmare v comfortable IhzliM1ood far tnys<If and ramble On looking aver what I ban wn n, I land that there e great marks of weakness, perhaps a in rmtnre. Well, you will be Add enough to owtlook any hardwaas of Wig sort My health is considerably better. I wrote to Eunice Sperm by the Livcryaal Steams last month. during would be more draftable Wan my filmy. I do not know whether my wife came to Iwm anything from ore or not, I hope you will sena this m het as son, as ymr haw opportunity after msding it yourself. May God keep and member nil of you Your Dutifut Son Bar Wines N.B. Jsnu Brown and Ito Anderson tire to good heNW and wish to L remembered to than friends' Randall Worm and the Curacao acre become and sailed for America an the "WmLnglon", loq Yl, I939 but did not mum to Canada. Some of We rebels who named random during We adnime on Toronto esaped cut and crossed Lake Ontario from 1M harbor at We mouth of ate Rogge reports. ' Moral the ill feeling which had gown no in the towtsmia as a some of the nuniy between Rebels and loyalists made it- self felt in all kinds of ways. Mr. Wm. Dunbar and his two sena and Mr. Geo. White, ap of We Scottish statement at Wnbmton arched to Toronto, questioned and released The Annmt homestead on Mature Road was searched for rthb and its two old chop quos confiscated James Greigo clerk of Session at the Pmebyterino Lurch, led a onion para to she Leary of Me Poa4 n the second combustion, As they entered, looking for rebels, they w t dos'smarmy by Pests daughter who, with poker v d been poker her hand, m split the skull of the first one who came near. Meanwhile her younger sister, Helen was sent to wain the registers. As she went one,f the party sentsenta bullet after bar which buried itself harmlessly to a rce. James Calg hied in his Session liecoraa an 24th of remember and -reduced himself from fdlmmiip". Something of his character is shown in We story of how, after he married his bmlbcrs widow he me& o habit of keeping vcry close tab me everything that went or n the Joan. Trading that the meson was being nand more quickly than it should hrvc been he added an emetic to the sugar eddy, only in land that tha estate seem snu measure of ire increasing T,wmhip Browbeat bowery. m nv a that one man 9mJlm a v Lake amaan while Mein cab ...... deal man, c uaga,d from am Rose or Recession in a memo, arts, hiding m omna> and Janata. party was poor old uncle Omnlay. who was apparently vying to sweeten the hard actions under which James operated his household. Among thou suspected of migration n'as Rev. R. H. Thornton, who had begun Imlding Presbyterian services in Pickmine. 11e hada detachment of soldiers billeted in his house, who, one dark night, fired on the clergyman as he w air home from Gumr Columbus — fw who wly be exaped Injury. Someof hathio who were ahvitl mWinguch uncleared in the di rebellion xM1of the fiwn the ice of the hom share f the did not ere ere carried of rho oOsweg along the oonh shorn o[ Content f Oshawa cried c¢ron to Oswego , he reia Daniel Coned n(ewhe n the schooner l "Intone". in a remainder us as possible, ssible whzn Noy mould oud vied N mutein fo i Canada are allknon. The ,the of the randhollscone s for Canada are wall known. Lord we Durham, the Commissioner Earn b in verma:ke the troubles rzc emud that change m the form of gopemmar was as am long eller the presentation 1841,n perf tax famousand Lo Repan, charge moo Wood long in ming. In egish Upper and Lower Canada yea were united oned ,stain into a Legialadve lining and in the years which followed outcome dationRclormars, that, in bringing w pnex Lord DurM1anrs meow mi sha4 recommendation reamembeicetV ro he oversted r and of all ry, should of be Cov rept 15c Governor with B tish Cons should be muredGovernor by every cams known to the British should be in. - re Gavlist as the repay an its of the Crown, should ho im wded that he ho vary an his gnvlature by Lads of tlm Imrl:wnla, in whams the United no support floorhall rem i cony fidenw; and chat be mon te. excforept t support aw home in any coolest with Nc Lcgiilvlurc, coapt on pointe invotviny strictly Imperial interests."' to say Who is m soy Ma much a coumry must pry of its Iazdoin^ lcruhwn. To Whom N also Did n[ OUMam, 1819, Monaca pope 301. CHAPTER X MILLS AND SNIPS By the time the Act of UPion was played in IPAI, Narrating TownsFlp had emwgad fmm the rally pSharing stage and had begun a period of pronominal Fmwlh, The population bad Was up from 1718 in 1832 to 3752 in 1 At no while there was sill much to be done to sitar the land for firming and to open the conlon ands and rdelays, the township My beginning take mine t as a and g nNeo than n prem [ares with a Law tato, xome mbine and clearing. at ve hamols become t to pinkie b the Kana, t me whlult Fed bocomn p toll road s planked from Tommo to thin ed a DiM1cct r were d didwas and Mpmved. and p tray it wagons a began run mad and was no gravelled umil IP60, Stage Fegvn mooing from Toronto Rmrye Hill Toil Cart t_ Frenc6avans,,Buy. 1890 as early as 1816 and were replaced by Welles repairs in the 1830'x. In Pickering uag lines ran up she track Road and ross dip sixth and ninth concessions to cormet with Markham Mmes poor, stage c aelim etluiPpM with a - force and by 1834 there were Gvn roaches a weal, Imm Toronto to Kinp9on. An advertisement read: "Mnmreal, Kingma and York mail stages leave Montreal, Kimsron and York every day except Saturday and Sunday at lour A. M. and arrive the following day. All bagyuge at the owners risk. Fare from KinF9on m York 5600, buvgag, 30 Has and under free." During the summer Lake navigmion was often Rod in prefer - arm to the coaches which sometimes had a rough passage. In low places. tog would be used to prevent the muhes from sinking to the mud,'Whole trimmers of trees were vacrimod to food a corrugated anmeway or their round trnala, laid side by side. aver which wagons could as slowly drugged or bumped.. any attempt at speed lying checked by an ..nmcdi:nc rymmnm of approaching menhaden of vehicle."' lPlliam Welke out me Royal Mail line four horse coaches, the most famous tiny, and personally drove one trio from Toronto b Montreal (360) miles in 35 hours and 40 minutes, with changes of horses at mrs; such. ox Sears Comer, Oshawa or Pats Inn, just east of Pico rmg Village. 11. Twenhmwr molars of Piceaiaenmle 11 Tomwemum. In 1833 a sten....left PrcanoO ncry J,, lar 1'oronm. Hamilmn and Niagara her It flee time the popolatioo was not large enough no make mob a hot orvinable However, by 18401her. were idly Ile lake. Among the most think, the (,feet Im a Robin a 400 plying bet t,l'or wW Ningw wub u t Hamlllon. In 1842 tl,, llavhuna Im, sh ieled and n hill, line, the Royal Nail line with three ships, Prinren Rowl, CiA of loon, and Smnelym. They regarded between King,t1a, and Toronto. AI Frenchman Ray shipping became more and more impor- idea s the produces rat the lumber ends, Bart mills and tarns haeme Bremer. Decks were built at the north end of the bay, in n area which is maim at present, and in 1843 work was began opening the channel into Take Ontario so that legal ships might use it, A horse drawn ekvamr and scoop we used for Nis margins: but by 1865 the stomach was opened and the docks built. Bmmbew of heavy silting at the northern end of had bat', a road constructed and the which moved to the cast side of file bey. The nalaafion of the docks and elevator, which brae sit disappeared, wss on the east side of the bay too, but much acam Take rateio. With the growth of shipping and dock faaililies. Formation and the tiny village of Liverpool on the Kingston Rwd tome into being. Some roads, such as the road which run dawn between the Rouge and little Rouge, one used to haul timbers, masts and log down to the sawmills or to the docks on Lake Ontario For the most pan ties mods within the township Overt cut out and maintained by stahumlabor. The District Road Commiuion- would Mei& Aar was to be done and what amount of public money spent and then the actual mark was murds! out under the subdivision of the puthmnslns chosen at the annual Town meet ing. As the papulation pew the harbor of two dominate incleascd and the mads were opened up rapidly toward the middle of the casualty, Most of Ne Kings College and clergy reserve lands had been sold before 1840 tad had passed out of Ibe hands of the Orono into firm of free holders who thus, at a late dao, hernme holder, of demo fall, the Crnxn. T:mher was the big capon product of the day, and in 1845 f5dmhg warrant three .1hon fm of [unifier. Them were Mehry, airships in operation in Piokuring Township in 1846 and wounty- six In 1848 so that it is evident that the greet stands of place and tendered which once covered the township went rapidly bewg cut way. Lumber was shipped out of Freethinkers Bay nM the Rooge across to Oswego NY. where it might be taken dorm the Oswego Coal and the Bde Goalm New York are, or It might IIM 1, mental in Turned whore it Nuhn of coupled had teem. Probably the largest somber operator was ]oosen: Pan whac mill was at Dallas Creek near the Back Road Tis growth of the mills location a demand for came skilletl timAmsn. minwlighs. carpenters. joiners and construction men who did not intend m beware farmers. Often they would build Louses for thcnmlves near the mill sites. This was eaoaiulh, into where they womad at the four grin mills as little communities vrom grow mound Pickering Village. Claremme, Damo otl and Brougham, Timothy Rogers mill was located on the pal site of acres- one iererane Village in 1807, and was in operation real his death in 1827. For some years there does not appear H hard bran a gdn and[ In Picurrng, By 1837 James Elliott had a mill southern lust north of the village, which at that time had ten ar twelve families Ten years kir thea were about 130 people in me village and it homed a summary, a smarmy, several st and warkuhups and four churches. The Featherman. Roman Catholic Wesleyan and Darker, St Omrges Anglican, defended at the beymmg of the fattier undo the tuNlage of the Eaniats was completed in 1848. DuMns Crack. as Pickering was aphid, nko had a doctor, Dr. Bums, probably the first in the neighborhood. At Claremont, Jahn Miden built a mill on the mu vada of Le 18, Can. VIII, which is south of rho Present village. He men had a atom .about half a mile with of the present village eross- mads. In 1847 Thomas Noble kept store W the stone building still standing on tire south cut of the intorecaioe which had men built by John Hamilton`The name, "NWles Comm' me to be attached or the lloge. In 1851 the village obtained a Post Office antl the name Clatemdnt, ws suggested by W. H. nn Michell in memory of his catrel homein Flnnm. The some year Sohn Michull movM his business into a new brick building ,meet the crossroads and in the may 18505 tin village boosted Node Same, Past OFtm, alrenem' Hotel mad Maintain Store. It s still difficult to get to and from Clarcumm and its merchandise had to he handed by wagon tram Toronto or up the Brock Road from schooners in Fleishman; Bay. Much of the busiwn was carried on by batter and it is mid that wagonload of eggs was hauled to Toronto every raw, days, while butter and Other prod- vetsre of hire find weexchanged for travelerstravelersgnmerie, At Whines], the first had w considered by Jahn Major in the 182Ps. In 1850 Taman White built a gristmill and added draper shop, planing mill and mon and door factory, and the porommion of the village began to grow. Brougham crimused after Lord Brougham, was dnginally the name of the Pmt Office at Howells Hollow, wehqust of the Orchestra village. Hart, on Int 15, Can. V., Mr. Siccly built a saw and grist mill about 1832. Th, plan, got its name, Howell's Hollow, from Henry Howell whu bought tin and about 1833. At on time it was the only grist mill operating; in the Iowmhips Howell Later built distillery Mae where men could emlmnge a but of gram for whiskey. Bentley's al built about 1835 at the back Road samer attracted v number of industries and gradually cul ran Howells Hollow is the she of reference. Greenwood developed around Ne mIDs which Frededot Grove affected in the vicinity from 1343. Knmvn oripinnhy as harvest. it soon took an the name of ,is most incarnated dtlecn. The aids at Greenwood, which may be considered in have been among the best In the ishowl ie have been designed by Alan Clerk. "Oa property, normally patented by Bacterin Hallowell in 1798 and Liter owned by His. lobo Elmacy, an Englishman by Tim name of Matthew Cmketlinc purchased a millsim of about 101) am, in or occur 1840. The former gentlemen, king wri- deots of York (Traveling), and intensities modltlons being primi- hw, it Is highly pmbuble the[ Galvedine was the fust owner In x the moron which he had privileged This praredy Iry in the north half of Lot 12 Concession S. and economical in in whole length the valley of DuG sCreek. "At u point about a quurtteo4unnile south of the Jamwnt villageine' n the x side of Ne Gownxvcd owed, whom the river banks steepen and marrou, to about 150 yards, this mill -site was selected Hew he constructed his mill -dam antl will "Three years loci in January of 1843, he decided to ark this primly, On Jnnunry 3L Matthew Cmkerlinc paid M the cal ance of his mortgage_ and three days later an February 3, be writ the property, mill and water rights to Pmderick Green. Mr. Green was I miller by tmdc. o,idmdty from the Tile of Ily, England. As his milling and property in expanded N the com wiry he became known alm' own as 'SgGwen! "the original data c fus comm n k t boa been n undertaking; with its clearing of the sit, the mmaing and diver Ing if the, greeter naw of the deer, and the building of the Aced gales and mill race. The dam remained , timber core over which the earth was piled to a height of eight to ten fact near the road, and to a harght of nearly twenty feet a the river bed. it (retched east and west across (lie narrowing of de valley. At g the w end of the dam, we timber food area Granted the overrun At the rest end of me dam the mill rate was built parallel to and only a few yuNs from Na road, "Behind the dam the water linked ep ooc ave a of r Los arm,, and old-timers say that it Presented A lovely umein Ibc wmmcr and hue skating in Ilw winter. Wit rimmed the forks of the Pond, and x m1mdel of Woo g1clL, nm tnor are ad119vminor at the site uttile time ofw 'Some tawmy to [,only file yard,, moth of the east red of the open, It the ted of the mill Eli a lore, at home called the now of the water to a row :dmre mo u ry of Ife emal wheel which Earned q,ia.l the de side or me mal. Often the what! me elders himbled and felt and the tailrace flowing dada- wul to the Eli to the armh of the aunt The nN mw of r ��d forks of the Pond, and x m1mdel of Woo g1clL, nm tnor are ad119vminor at the site uttile time ofw 'Some tawmy to [,only file yard,, moth of the east red of the open, It the ted of the mill Eli a lore, at home called the now of the water to a row :dmre mo u ry of Ife emal wheel which Earned q,ia.l the de side or me mal. Often the what! me elders himbled and felt and the tailrace flowing dada- wul to the Eli to the armh of the aunt The nN mw of the 4repm commit M ante In mid-sammer, wnerms in the spring and at Modaimn, the pairs water ata, remd mvm tee WW fault. This mill became krone as the Lower Mill. 'Sheltered in the ke of de, drum ,IT ngir nt the vhm, of the n W11, the original milt, n from, b gilding of dune-und-mh,lf orcya, faced onto the rand end to the .south, It is hatievod they the fund wheel meet how been well over fi0een feet in diameter. to opera[, each a leg, mill, aM made of oak It resolved on a Nick oak -timber axle which disappeared into IM1c title of IM1c mill. As the flume Tictua tl the flow of the stream over the broad m, the water tumbled into tiMrer troughs at cups about three to four wide sac into the free of the nm. 'Tnaido was the nimble of the mill-sbncs. Them seem three raor irs of tso be, with each single stone between four and five paNO in mutant, uncut a four thick and weighing about el pounds. R is speculated that ,hoe must have been hauled am, corduroy roads by teams of oxen from Frenchmmis tray o tmilar WI't When installed the upper stone moment above me stationary lower stone. The power from the milbwhcel sale as tnosferred to that revolving upper stones by a... s s of pulleys, wide leather holes land large Womi gears with landsame togs. Later a number of chevmort were added to Int the milling products from hopper to bin Nmughout the mill - "To farmer a gravity food, the gain %as unloaded into hopper at Ox r middle slorcy, on the east aide by the tallness, here it was probably elevated onertorey, and then flowed downwards to Ne various pans of mill -sone, The grain entered the pairs of failbsmme by meant of a vihmting sloe which distri- butN the kemek through a hole in the centre of the upper non,. As the groovingio the stones ground the grain, it was ordered atthe side of the lower nwu where it dropped through o chat, to the reel. The and evnN The bran from the &or, In... were bagged and r ilaimed at the gromW floor level. This mea[, that the issue hod to step at des east side for unloading, antl then drive m,,d to Ne youth side for leading flour. TO filter early days then ww fees rine in the County, and it is ,aid that pioneer error, brought their omen to Squire Greens all from Or or nmtn as &oX Township. The surplus floor, time and above The nrds of the farmer, was shipped in bmreh to N, Inkepurt warehouse, at Frenchmun'e Bay and lion Union rip the 'Top Road from Greenwood and the Kingston Road Them were two deem rumps of this. "The Om w e the mope -trade, or bEn'cimakinf. The flour was shipped in wooden barrels of about 206 pounds capacity, and in Na chromosome ue !nose a large number of men w anbso- Gently employed. so of mmnm leer life 1r ash In max mae m lite weet of the village that it became sale, as Cwpsamum The world, usually ovk wax secured !mm the!noel bund. "Tile other resell was the need for additional made It 4 knows that for a mI of years a indoor existed that ran otthonm from the ails If the Inver Mill, although n0 ease of It has loop deal JIFaPPnrW. It P lads, accurate wan the Sixth Gnconxi .. at v point III the dmzwny, of the Presen urural. II w not until Inlet that the rlght,A.,ay or the south end of the 'lona Road, only muI wall purchased by ensure Glenn. In all probabillly the north pmnm did not ,an .min the Tannery and Distillery were locate along the wen we of it about 1830,It am therefore be and, amt what h known as the (returned Road.la m fact a -say i road in its northern extension `An bmime, ,mmir with the program; whereat, may. nada to the mill A wiI m1flans was male lu me east end or me mid cad jailed out over lee mill -ter e, for"ing n type of rearm mmde at the sauna floor hoes of the mdl along me ,,did, A t rmy-ana.a.hnu lean -lo "In added I III w end and to utero ter n .thy was utimam Millin, machinery n installed. At a Inter Period r and fork trent kiln was hull noon of the name building and way of henen and was connected ib me mill by n law Home, alas. (This kiln Is Incorporated Into the residence of D, L T Ra¢lay- which study on lee site of the Lower Mill at the time of I,, ing.] All them uJJlllon end, tle pro,, o 1875. e fAn a¢rpt Torn the article of Ross Johnston which separated or UumnM, I886, under the not of 'The Traveller a the schaby Greater ad Chronicle sorer: `-TM1e wall mill is ..or by Frederick Croure Esq. it Is a aan'c awmy arm, mill with three run of stone T s. dmvn by calor Puwm: nmcnlnda in pond conditionem, (, mainly norma memory an Morels per day. Work done nuc a diad world, ran oft about l be bushel a day int across we mill race r wry fli dare mill ti mkiug'.r fion m' Ne mill race tvery slippery' operatian, of myuires me m FnIX circumick ( ' In the Iedto arcane oI m, cSquire Germy (The Prcdcl'ick 7. m ompiin lu is ILc r1xhow n of S,,, econtro l 'In BB]. changed .. ng an me a ch mi Mill mi decontrolled,edin and h was canothe ov oatmeal Inial. The mall comiru,J m it so, nosed to claim is m nowtI floea,;,ad the dmdam_ h wax senses m dammar, moping n Has xdG dna the y ill the weed mm cows. The mmenalx being salvage For am m me Upper, Mill Thus ended an industry at the Lower Mill which had served iss oers and community wall for over rifty years. Yrr, Syuirc (ireen4 family purchased what is known as the Upper st d¢ Lower MJI mos apua¢J by his yotmust son. Clod,, IL Grsa For a i ,f eight veal's it was bell to John h tNcll ,pen Ill: death In 1878 of Samuel f. Go". eldm n of Since (owed Froin about 1886 until It was closed down, the Lower Mill we, under uparallel of Frederick L. Caere wMwc Ira Petitioned previously. (FIc,hk L, we, I on of Samuel L Greon-Indo rc 'Many erosions of GreanwoW, coon in 1961, will well remevt her the hum of immeng Nm nrI the e. mod north a the foot of she hill tlonq thedaylight hours of any weekday - The then of Ne mrvil tram the Blacksmith Shoo and the distant drone et the limit out d the north end of the Intel cruise! to blend into a hantermy which Sn s the working voice of Cmc oad AJd m this heck ohlmlhwd w id .the ..mmnt of Nc tt of heclient,, ag the u.I to tnmaieo. of n ndd- r the �itegla of j, , M1ame ' bdU, the no bleu them statingtrial,or oft uttw and c Iran the ], d pial cf the ave het life thry s toe pulse of eM1e villa ea. ],dead, rheum most hill M1enN h will not soon Upper '9'bech al stomas.. muu of veto, antfailladurry was the Upper Mill ,hint 9aM ubasily a veto, north of dw beat ba m and tom of the uillatt. For easily n oil years this goat barand indittey domleamd the rmtgn, a aed.:n ether thrushes the uunJ it , market for t a minfiefarmers o for delay fWiih it Im Nc lie lie and a marks from farmersofthe valley. With its hum Imp in s 37, oil[ an era oft downtwo, never eg remit. "lois ndll . r know Greenwoodmnwarrfrom the wryGreenwoodadbeginning.In r whom tarp Nichnhes Howell arrived in o13,Co andonoln III Non acre patch He 1 the l noM1 Iul5 of Lot IJ, of 15, ion V. ace, orL t ut Lot . end northel ISo macs it Lot I5, wJ 50a- rcs of Lot Ifi in eha':g, concca:oa. He bolter n P.:irly hat are known L: awaiiI dollo ng and slka, man in what banner known war Hawaii rhes HOOaw;' the vellcv mutM1 of use M1i¢ Mlle M1alf-utile well se mrdlnegi, Inte IJ, With this 2, Con lowering I he purchased ie valley the wntM1 half of Lot 12, inter to Ven ntlth anIn1Mwllaym the Y mil It ]huge inter cam,m. he bulli a as Hondal-half dLI ll. . w t ideal theOman _ it o Nicholas Howell Nrimit that ha AW fie rests Omen N, of bmsitrq 1855. h it ad last dent leo ch root ie ape hisenmlceitBY in ], had the lisle to much of tire property he M1aJ undertaken inv'lodng IM1e mill In Greenwood (The map of 1895 shows that Howell themam ors still owned 200 seem of Lots 15 and 16, Coalman V, at that tlae.) "Although records indicate tile[ the letter, Mill property passed into color ownership, it 6 believed that above 1856 Sti Green leased this mill and begun to apello it The 6vr owed ofomer- ship by the Green family was in 1868, when Samuel J. Green, the son of Smim Gmetr produce] the pmperry, me mill and same rights front Laurie B, Bickel for S6,500. Restricted in the Family fat well over me neasercey yeah. "As nalW earlier, this building was four-.ante[-0alf cloreys high, and Its engine] dimensions Laws approximately 80 feet long, 40 feet wide and 55 4,W feet high. Itis said that it took three years to build this mill and the Limits used were hated -leve. Gem pile have off Howell's land to the west of the village. about 24 ..cher .a4uma and 80 fret long. "A molar of years Inver an addition, known as the Red Mill. as brought from a location on the Ninth Cowessloq and Insured t the ...dome ammo The building was three storeys hgh, about 36 feet wide, 40 feet long, and formed an el] to the main min. "Both buildings war or timber and lmme ms traction with elnPWnrd siding. The smaller mill had at one time been Painted red. 'M the wutlwna angle Banned by the two milk, a tworencey kotto was added At later Lim n ]canto w s added to the west ode and another m me north side, of me mill In me eastcnd lean-to was located the office or the off far ,any years •'Each of the four surreys had n numbs, of windows that en- imiM me grey, weather-beaten side, of the main mill. A fame canopy also sheltered some of the fattest Lord almost sparrows and Pulse in Piessing Tnmahip. "The mill was powmed by a 73 M1om power, downdraft whet] which ,evolved on a veniaal shaft mooy feet below the Level of the ground floor. Its powertransferred tl to great Llier ,equaled from the grono other; thew ran the length and depth of both dw uuN mill and the Red MAIL "Over a periW of many yams a tremendous quantity of milling ma@iium ms metalled in this Offer Mill wort thousands of dorms. The multilateral made by caped orchestra known as mill-wrights. Perhaps the best-known of these ons Ruben Dram, whose skill in his trade was alumni The we[ pressure to drive the ober was derived from damming OUBm4 Creek some mrtequar]ers of a mile Emmet north, and [tons - himself me water through the militate an a point at the wnM1- t so& of me mill whom its head' of fall was an least fomn fors. ire ander form fill parri was originally brought down to the wlwcl by an reduced wooden from; nowever, this was force m- plaretl by a 3Ginch creel pipe of boiler plate that declared at an angle of approximately tniny-11w degrees for ewe 115 felt m the wheel. "With each a GII and volume of water, it was mora bk to oper- am mmy m04ng processes at the Upper Mill. A lust of these is is follows: (a) poor lung — both billed and plenty, with bppishem of middlings, shorts, bran, and Graham node. Also bandoliers hunt was made. (b) Barley flour milling — pin head, puna and pot barley as by- products, (also barley fresh). This was milled in the Red Mill, or Rally III is it was somnimo called. (e) Ceea6 —Scotch Beret', Wheadets, Oatmeal and Flax and rolls. Also three grades of corn Mur were milled. (d) Ga b is — ort and barley cM1op, Maley had and mrom ince. This Mill Awad three days per whi rhe Lown Mill Wished owl, week day. "At the prink of its operations, the Upper Mill bas n gmxred many thousand dollars per yen,. filling contracts with Toronto and Morelli films, and at one ante even as far as Small America. Brand names of the Greenwood Maur were: Gave.. City. Wean, White Awry, Kurmar. and Bokser Jay. "Mthm,d] there are noon who can recall it at she time of this writing, it would appear that the milli and midi sac originally but have x fee Ii than the parent mariamis wxWo hidwara The ntmceable , of the older upper just on or ehind the mill-race mu still traceable as is t, I the Iwai rya FeM1ind the da ,Onowe. as Is tuvnuud that, a1 ibc tipolar when what Iver win known as a g xcona tDamimber H m the Lime ohm was cod Iranian, mac was n ghat umber tome carried thespanning ll emir, and az hMm r t e i yet long B tato h e full flow of the it n r the Wily, and is said gi have been s hool,a n orlm ming Paine! of hi for the young gins from me school, an oldiimm tains da of his boyM1ocd. "Tt recently maw dmm spanned armrge. atom 150 len wide. Origin- ally it eenor an enfM1 dem ere were with timber eir me MtM1 .vnMo and a is fore There were nand gates near me c omat fl cud and out p gore near the nam until end. tiub- snrvent ntirda washed out mentons or 06 dam omni h am, re- placed entirely with Nr cement neoaorta. me remnma of which �stdl 6e seen. 'n i. at this I�oim that meridmt :xnnM he mase of the many clman who atended nu dam III III Ibe trying and .groese^n, s daysandnights of t1l It Is said that in mgll fiord the or me o great that b dro I u at .bu or the nate only ren fronteachother. Add m Far me blismas and the buy of a assuming meLv and one rennus the matt@ of the melt wIm reduced me trying Slide I, ,, Sol ro keep due milk rr Lord the brtaJninner, of IM1e light e. ring. At rm,I bod, IM1e dam backed up o'er many hundreds of your, alamet to the Seventh processor, in re flood hood, mid lost IM1e wutm mare) through the gate, do to six feel beery `flowerer, it would be unfair not to minumn the huwy and the paid of the LEE and inget oadw border Ondilir The walk along tire road tothe hear orate milMme toate drum we, too firodurge mostints or may 3 of Mln_cr, ur a SuuduY ^hoc n Plea whx oI "Owr, the mlmH ninny yeah in bins I...I 11th Nlll w In (111 ou_ domes of aniflers the and labonms' ai w4m flab families h Ibe vmruge. Some re the n M"Inite millua ImJ AlLod. MI of the Mar ,hall, ml Gerry, were. John Mitchell, Fir Lockwad o d, res Mar, Moor order,Aff Carry, Charlea \ilson...11, Robert tShowod, Alexander Moog Alfrtal (hind a E.liowmin, Robc[I Orown (mllbwtlgllt) James Ihemat mead man aor). .busy mat npemter on a inn -hoar daymayor boor acorn m six, and ,it busy snuam' operated Jay and uiyo,r The grant ml for rho At _ ainf mill is he begs per Imue a Soo grant per far At times like them IM1e loop Ellie [c would be their op as for base as[lie hefront, shoo abJ tla Joru waiting er their turn. a Nero liters the riept II stood oboe m Mops at the turn animal. and IM1e rnnxnt heli,, Indeed, Ny Mill al the tom of the crnmry in and Ommio x.0 net wimom its slwinl value m the caul foily: 100 About 200 am. of Jehoul nbi g. fired an employee of the Cppnr Mill JI¢werm a fire my'ng. ONer employee M1sJ mer working bac at IM1e moll huntiles ase find or alarm x summer and nearby a se ma a my chase land forms tried to was me lire. The heavy visible forand Mi the Nlmee gale, I. neh. Thu flamlBoll x SCImm !nr miles. Dire brigade, form Bondthe handler and ad dont,do iv the xeoa r ALI toy IM1e ,mouldering mile f li m, ny able Iho Limorelay Inf Iny a gee amlleeol a that or or msen W bre. n tats day, themrt the trans cool oeough for na to lysin In .tele mem- me trim ImsIde Yet. he II J el §only id pa "Y,v, Nee ollre Itlb only pert of the story. For h, res of me tory. ask the olJS ua—and lmtrlt their eyes linhtup" CHAPTER XI AGRICULTURE AND POLITICS IN TNG FORTIES In the fodle; a mer the first fierce battles for mr, nl had been n looked armed dorm and prepared to take Ile next ship to v fuller and more comfortable life. Because agriculture war am foundation upon which the township was broader, it war natural that they should look he improvemcros in farming and retire rv.ae sing . of achieving their aims The Bost agri- halmal pnp, in Upper Canada was The Autdoh American o@ro red In I842 by W. G, edmrndwn of Trustee. R was on followed by Pre Camara error, and Tule Agrierdmrral and Canadian Journal of Wm. Meetings]]. These papers seem constantly weotaing on new ideas in the farm world, and at the mate lime advocating free access to the American market, a stand which would be supported by Flown - Big expressers. They published market quotations for a list of products antl attempted le give some analysis of market and crop interior At o another then papers toyed with the idea of co-operader marketing by bumers, while at the same e they deplored 'the monopolies onour m aware next or a11m nd ship ownw, m Ihage high Timor for shipment. Ofmom: they da, preferred We building summa nal saidnies. RnrWm had Its ma zran m rmdnml mainly In 18" and six rears later the Pickering Agtmolmral Society was farmed, 'to amount, Agealmn, HelieWma4 Household Area and the ]in - partition of motion The enrichment of bearding stuck W improve farm herds and the comity of horses hamm, a wry meeidiml type of brown by Ne mMtllc of the century. The for imearters in the township were the Millers and William Miller's own worts tell the story wish "My first uperionce on the water was along with faun stack. mrm,muer al inmN Of In the summer of 1818 my rather loft his native Annandale for Canada with my other and family, any uIdnt brother John having gone some four ram before. With uv ,or to, Lo,,,ar shay, four white some and two di At I,ivcrpml we aded he [lie barque MUSH for New Ymk — fin cheap aro lo deck in the long such swine In a penr disks and children at large bot they could go into what by counary they called the second cabin.— the ship was slaw, the winds lscut and it took unicorns, days to fork, Now York. l'henec we took a nenmbmd to Albany'. then thmagh the Erie Canal to Rochester (which took a week), then acme Lake Ontario by bat to Torontq once friends mel us and think n wagon, through the woods anal ma,thevood,i Penman — twenty eight miss — ar what is core Hamilton, Oat..,where my father and brother Jahn bowed o for us a comfonuhl, hums: and gathered soared cleat fin, nolo floes, sheep and spirit arguing for the mdVe, in mote pally days amea the lending breeders of ear lane. Heart herr and strong nrma like mew made public what site Is to- day — cheerfully the pride of the New Woad for sbmy in- depcndenm, real intelligence and successful agriculture "Some time in me forties my rating, slated Lewis R Allen at Black Aak N.Y, bringing home four Shormorn heifers and mf fast wlume of thin American Hard Bonk. One of the heifers was Kum Ksaral by that sound (aboard fall (Juke of Wallington 55 (3654). Bales bWle wo, bulls men. Kale Kearney was Imd to Lnp. Captain. It Snitch hull, and produced Lies Larger, the mother of (bat grand Alba family now zallawl and I fear last. No Jona impartation of 9M1onhnma Fed hem medo into Canada ,all the Honest Importantsilly a fess that Mr 2d_nk Wade of Cabwry mmignt from Dailey, 1 think in 1950 to I BR nay father sent un nNer to Bernard Syme. Reakirk, Dumftles, Rot - land, for rale Shorthorn heifers and Leicester sheep. The% came .and the hooter, act grunt. 'Nat yrer. 1853, I an, rent oner by my failure and bmtner Jona m brains tock At New York 1 took WEE, or the lulls teleran, a regular uWalyle line, "a n: ermal s wad 'Match, ates. nut Nor 18 days we build or T iesman] :JI nen( the walk heram Christmas Making my way it, mcfly to Ann 1 examined the Buskirk near mem. and 1 nm Bud it ono of nae nee4J 1 s: — Army of substance antl constitution for just s eq are ankles iders nos regular ewedeo— In daljun ifM1 is we v nhw bJay poly a Mule assay ",our bided', bre if this reformats herb moon kesuch, bcurr Wm Dl it. After lade my time moos On Loader , nor k of ng "iter 1 made my way wmM1 to see Ne Sife mercury nm knowing well a of R d gar, as 1 knewliming of Ne but Yllr idJt ill Dmmm and nothing abroad Ri...printer. but gas lrhad fond that an I 'tarrid 511 and me hatin 'Ince w c ; ownuuneth • l 1 Carlen elaes for am buts end. full Th Imo o the assume L tome for rts nem;nn but Poona it had in In ,, I tend he note concluded than had n r 1insu lido with M1euor look mJ had the prim a co to maul and n Ong specimenwg of eat dwagpl Englishman —n mmmzsid fancier whe knew a gwli dein help the all he co, me Mlle him Has t lormcd and lees willing m n Bo sur rill omcnnhl. Rome, Sa him i Ory (limned of Richardand Jahn gain, Thomaskand Wiygem_. "C<osW6 me less uker, into s and is with by levy ce hare ch rend I visited after is king caries and sewing Deem an. That \oltigeor jou afiec M1is famom race with (lying Dutchman. Then on o the goals 1 wu;i whom at Cannot s of th, Ames 1 bought twomuy dM Ltimal¢ lop& pact 1 wont to yummy, whom 1 Ilml the planum oI ad spending a law day, win what I should Nlnk lee oldest of the famed Shorthorn man than brand. Smnuel Wiley: I e we his nubtl Baum in drimbrecches on Ili, nrom man cob, diincline to every Jclail of hi. splendidly actual establishment, 1 think hewnsthan o,or lovely -fire and oinfo his noted Shorthorn he old the best of hucksters — n typo o1 M1h on fit,plot venule fat little rchit, Yark,h little cards — m fat they vee Idrearcely see Ibought romp from ben. made my way bal'. to Scotland blue It Iwms Ill Place, loading Moana. I ant mel Simon Ill aM team food, my heodgnanms for Stahel The Sachs More Mr, lames beside, Sidem S uncle, wit], whom Ile lived. had sent as Lal. tl there bought the Clydesdnla ,albon Rab Roy. one of ...too. the fim four Clyde' ever brought to Ammon m far as i know At the assume time bought Let ..be, old three Ovlloways. By tees way. 1 was them when William Note c of Tilly bmghl and look away !mm Newbie two mon excellent Oallmany bell 'Spring was now conal an and we had to start with about forty sheep, twelve coati a 'finite and maim, Ciydesclnle colt, ,my, Joaka. Irons, ate l want to Liverpool to try to get a smaller to like dean. but passenger hung would not lake We live stock and other shows things asked Steil Imighl, m 1 went beak to Annan Jalcnvined to mil from there. At that flare Armen boll are five rhills for the tea trade and had two old brute for Huhu twig micifflas o Mantel hnl mostly to Oil making u will a, the sawn and laying op In the winter. On bee e of hhale. the of He4n year one ea look passage for thele, She war huilt on or vf¢nbc lrnr one l l Itleblbathe New borrowers, Time ml of Ne best o while riiM1 bull sing do with inch pine nod carry of larevery 'Priv bcNm leaving port She was se mm he, boom, hall its broad i long. een hadthe only one close Innocent. 0, M1eams lulow beep bola between the cin and fof some On theato beams were lois clubs trend the a to named cm of square timber r make a truly fm ,in, avd aM1eep to on. Sheep wiso put forward where a w' m low for whichmF eimt Thcv further aft aelk w gmade plan, r rum caul, which w m deIl m the chip, side. 'ILa lotto plow ereclaimay narsme could get ma, room unwas Ilse tedo whore th, abandon their horn, rMrve elect Rest h w arrested mi mar for J;c t back l The after pan of between ,, decks grew half m You Fitt buck lorvurJ the nlbin till it w"n six "mJ one feet. "On ou we cmaxd and in Polr shape in fifty Jays About the first of April they consulate at high water by man and house in haul her from her winter's moaning to the filly where the Annan joins the Solway In load our stock, but it wag night and they tuck her on a her where she lay till they rum a ditch had the tide you lose ten days later. Her Ilat b000m kept her room keeling over much anal lay on level lined sand on tiro side or the river out of the channel, so cans were driven alongside and our friends put on July, story, and turnips. nix was all loose and free of cost in rcspea of my trillion The feed had m be pm either below the cabin IT foesusily as more the cattle all liquid man - n through the WLI onto the antl ballu where wam, make were buried. Thu time came when they gal her down the ver to the loading plain, where homes, cattle, and been were hoisted on boards in slings by hand windlass. It vow a beautiful April day and the Fair of tire town was Nem to am as off. The mg took us over the Robin Rig and cast us adrift in the Solway heeded for the Irish Chnnncl and the Isle of Man. We had fair weather and Iml only two or three sheep. Even it, along as the old thing was we would have made Ouches in rose weeks, but in the gulf we were kept two week by ice," William Miller's brother loin, income Pickering s most famous b ince of Shorthorns and shsp. The family on Lot 18, Con. VIL expanded until John owned 350 acres, parts of Lot, IS, 17, 16, Con. VII, and 350 ac scattered about the Towmlap for his enormous herds of cattle, shop and swine rtginmd a great deal of feed. His Clydesdales, Rob Roy and Rlaek Omrelas, pmdul prize and swecmmke winners at Provincial Show, Imo 1863 on. in 1889 the Monteith herd numbered 50 females and 10 male, with immune Vice Consul, takwg first P= ..h of TM1e Haven turce, he woo shown. In 1885 John Miller ,to a yearling call for 82,500_ GpM1usl high, pail up to that time fm Charging bind Clydesamc. Some of those who nominated to the mwnNip had had expert retire with tical fain and pleading nutaM1es and it sea, in the dasdn or the her that the ploughing match was lnttodtaed into Pickering. Rivalry Mlwmn different townships was gams and in I849 Whitby township fated a challenge — open to any IlawvhiP to send twenty men and £I0100 to scheme toy by unampionship. Scuboro nmpted. and the contest was held at From Inn, o Kingston Road, as being halfiwy answer, TM1e Scarb r, man defeated Nose from Whitby Slid the trtssurms mpnt throws an interesting oddighl on the event • IDa areae" 6m1b. N..Cmee, 1894. too To bin for dinners at a S. d. Wm. Palmer, in Pickering L 0 0 Pay for beer in the field 5 0• Pay for Turnpikes (tolls) 1 5 0 In 1839 Kingston Road. along with Yong, Stuart Ind the Dootlae Read area of Toronto, became a toll road and was ad- ministered by Ntee Commrat. In 1849 thew lime ready yielded a com annual revenue of about $11,000 to the govem- ment and were a perennial ha porous at every siting of the legislature. "full gala wertmpopular and while they w - uatM in such a way that they were difficult to gel around, men and wagons often clo find a way. The prioeilul byproductof the use pro was the improved township road as any former would willingly work out bis period of statute labor on a acal ship road J 1l meant that he was providing himself with an easy way to get around n provincial toll gam. While the lemon might not be considered on ideal place for a prompting march today, it hosted many events: radioing meet- ings of the Township Council, wNN, after moving about focal place to place finally scaled down in 1835 to meet at Thompson'a Tavern on the earner of the It Road and the fifth conservation. Ice meednm were held lune for were occurs year. The whAwn If Chmating inch a rip, arive hall is crown to some doubt as then habhabituatetiathat su of the gahmnup at Thempwns were rt wdy, n say the 4w- Muni,ipal paramount became in singly important as the population growam col Early 1 ,oils bad legieraed oMm fencer and cold, pan,&, bu:auw they ry e denied the right to handle m mnlmrs, But in 1939, when Lord Derham made his report on conditions in the colonies he mg- gmted,'that dm umMuhmmt of a goad system of Mmticlpal Institutions throughout thew Provinces is a earlier of viral ial- pomace. A pomace.A general legslaure, which manages ted Ativan Ontario of every parishe in addition b due common business of Ne country, wields a Power which no single Ibody, however popular in its nsmnficn ought to ham.. . Insmad of ronfil the whole collection and distribution of all the revenues raised in any country for all general and local purpose to a single rural vsmile Mtly, the power of deal assessment, and the application of Ne funds ansim from ib should be enfmsled to local management —the premuaion of the Crown should be constantly interim ed as his Per 11UPnGad Imka6 andand aM1I tt did rmove, egubr¢ dianalbmMtIt wish, ,b, handed elotN me wave to cher: may accouterment on the ruomi of local caries, until the people should Mco:m alive, M most worm ly Nry almost mediately would be, to the necessity or Demands their local pflvile6m" Lord Sadsnbam, who came to Conetiv is Garment Gunenl n 1839 had the dilhwlt task of introducing such parts of Dar, James' report as had been im ana by lie Imperial Government. He ma believed that now rynear of municipal government was of primary imiaartonac to eliminate "lobbing" by the provimial government. Hehad down We principle that all purely Inial expenses should be boom by the Mcalitic Memmlves and that only Theal worldshould W paid for out of provincial mi When SydeMam a mu was introduced into the first session of the parliament or the United footwear in Upper ::fid Lever Can. arm at Kingston, in 1841, it was opposed on all title. SyUmham himself whore: 'Toe Tories oriented the measure Micros it gave ton much power to the profile, the radical, because it imposed checks on their pow However the bill passed and Menm, the District Councils Act of 1841. It provided for the incorporation of each bufia, its powers to be eurcived by a council composed of a Warden ap- pointed by the vascular and Councillors elected by the 1nbnbi- 4mt Freeloaders antl Househalden'. Fish township was to elect one emitter; a township beth more d m 300 broadcast free hold and hums holders were entitled to two councillors. Corm millers were actual to be residents of the township they wpi rented and possessed of hart within the District or adjacent District to the value of X300 over encumbrances. District Councils bad jurisdiction road; ad; wager, District cost acme, costs of admwlslermir jrinKrestablishment and mom tenance of whorls, Districtolnceas and Towmhip officers salaries. Their revenue was to came Into tolls of taxes on real or personal property of both, bar wore Iholbd to 3d on thea reread value They were required to men quarterly In 1846 the Act was amended so tM1# clacks, treasoers aM surveyors could be criminal by the coumils. Pickering Township formed port of the Hone Dison, which was composed of some fatty townships, Ne m:mber being re, duced to Worry four in 1849_ sad W. IT Michell, poet, farmer and visionary, was Pickering'c lit, representative. To produce a mare uniform rysann of Municipal Gwernmem from : 9WI foot of the Par of Damara, 109, Sol 10 [1111,11 nae.± . 1941, mathe in Coastal. Imine 29. Mo,_ oamae.a, obdurate I but spb oalutle known as the Dmawm Aa was marooned in 1849_ At Nc suite Wolm TM1e Ola ll1a, were athAshed red the Counties became Ne territorial ronii tracer fusion, among Almost to nmonfthe iacdincofthe day, bar ip grey the founding w ural Ontario.Toronto Globe 1Marc ins T1844. P. ourr Ne Bought th f of Inc Toronto order Was on mem er o tire George Brown, d founder and first uiuss a member se Ne Reform rural and wielded Effort cry iyOnwlLi tun in rt mlemn IM1mufhoul nam Ontario. his Deme. ninny rears it wns enn of the rtMlm race, alone wish fo forty nip w every opal resident ' Eighteen fortyenine was a been inWn ed for Uppan, for, me! TM1e Broad preference hatl been infrared p xna Rdwin we teams Into a fine trade at the whichmad,many achum mlonim tine Mother er c mining beet that IM1ti w he nciid aharo of To century IM1e Mulhcr country. At the sa a the gTacame rvity of the .worry pas en rapidly as more lana coma lair emcrownin _ By mu ma o[ the aa:m. pofwhich Pi wring pro- duced minden million factors.Mof n t looking into then o. one hunon, do roffirri Men were no looking mm frc new decade during mush aolifamou The rush of manufacturegodhe fronta Iednnd figure s too potato,but fumino of here pe had am IM1e papulation hand h sp e, but many of these people a Caw it in hatl to start ew life notThe load, , often d to had ase wish s and to mha a naw fife TM1e Indomobl had to as IaM1orzrs and farmhands or lake nP has aakable Nmrs on a It it Charlie on sh. crat it y to no got On... to at iwall and mmvdvl Ford got Jaw 11 Ln.". Woe round, I You once, I Lmenl and wNy'I ObUe 103 rental bask, but by that of hard work they soon made a place for themselves mnang the Older sinister The decade of the cigh ren cordes was an aneasy decade. The shadow of still hmsg over many households new People were Pension law the township. The aid days were past and a whole generation of people w re growing rip who had never known anything but Pickering eTOwnship- Many of their�a secoM &nurnion piommr; mil d0 rvRered Ila effects of pioneering. They had not known the advantages of life in the cities and towns of Hall or Semiarid or the gentler His of Ne villages of New England, where schools and Churches were well egablished arm a firm pattern of living had been built up nam a hundred ycors. Instead they were bfoupfn up on the moos edge of the frontier With few ¢hurls and pear lechers, with few churches and with only IM rostrums of town and alloges. The gentler things of life, the broke, the music, paw( gx and all these lltings which an Old commonly, lakes for granted bad Leen domed Nis generation. They had had to make their town way, and it is not Imposing that hams mow, fomban and whiskey dI were Use [assume of auto of dw young backs who spent floi, working days rain ,cer, paling stumps or mhinu the man logs rip or the ams rural, rvam rotor away at the amiml i Podl,pa that lon6x could M colied Ilw mldhoo we of Jta Township, when a our mount Of energy was unleashed, but who, an in,, know what Ja firmare might W like When Aodrc Thtmpamn dome his mvem door on the last rnlebmm on New 'I s 5m 1849, he Gale thought IMI he would open it spin on ,decade that ice Camma was to seta new pare in production and Lk now high In development for the Township of Pickering. IN CHAPTER XII PROSPEROUS TIMES For twenty yours Rckenng Township bad been going through the entries of bmamim, rnormal more Nan a primitive sub- nily, By 1850 it had reached a stop ofdeverop- t, both sm,,l and political, which as to be the accepted Ivn.w w for my ye... n Of nnarze, the mileage made changes the con but New table enrage me mutual am, whim fife an the township was bum and so coker therefore merely in accelemt g a ormess whim was id- reudY going on. In 1850, when }lxtor Beaton took the cereus, he found that them were 6,O74 people in the township of which only 89 were nem en; of Ne men which had once mode IM1e French afraid to vmtore norm of Lala Ootano. Certainly the white mm had tnumphW and his activity was to be wen everywhere. There were ground Toward. storekeepers, brewers, portion, innkacto ors, lawyers, shipwrights, millers and many others plying their mdes in the township. TMrt were 1,616 children walking along its dusty summer mad, to the claimant schools or helping m gather in the hay or hunt the rows or perhaps just go swimming in one at the millponds whab on, to be found up and down the ones, and stream, where m'enty6ur as mills pmdmcd over live million board feet of the world's finest lumber. An arty report far the Bond, nary listed drum c a tots or iickaring Township week contained "a great ninny" plus from 8 to 12 feet in circumm mce ad 140 to 170 feet high. Masts and mymm limber, cm earl, exports, but by tire middle of the century math of the oak, classic and pint was cul into planks and board, and shipped o0 to Oswego or Toronto. Some, of uused by local consumers in Nan e my line homes and barn, of the period, many of which still am the township, or in the all :nods wmm w m leannam to make agricultural m. plural wagon, and not or by shin a ll on the III and Ferri Bay_ By 1851, over fifty pertent of the township hall roan Geared Of t :m me .:uu an me lest of ma alae rvs ,fine :: . overall seen, year: Fonunwely mer eta, mill demand far the days of the e laming ed m. ed. filo mill; xu of then, no dna of rickety c ricer o rinpwom handle cnna .endings and managing hundreds of men mmamnm the town. nipsewmldi alms Their appearance la the tnwvship as entry as Islo or 19 11 . and by @e of etre I950 was then tMrlttn mill, on the open branch of Duane Cit and dean, on and alar barred. Bilroth mill and Pmts wave just been if rising Village, annual up veto mills abroad by lame Dem favored dullard, Nicholas Howell lain Sala Boyer Amos 'Mpp Ind a:Nl1 near the mauN of territory Creek wb'at In the III John Barry had a mail oil theq side of the Break Road ahnr M1e1C a mile south of Claremont and the Niehmaudm muN of AlThiThese mills did nod cwas is circular saws bin's tyle knew, nt gate sows. ig sawblade in was suspendetl in n M1ht feet I forme a M1nut eight as In a up mal saw tight run In motion by means if Land up netl downwing n 'M1y of resonance.it oRtle enter poro or,earnedtl lesson that gPa of millsoIL wulJ be m¢mtl on all any little ilaes:on llie i waw fed tnm.Ill (lie mill by bund, by gravity or by a ratchet decay. Paw of them n:mdied laps more than o s fort long. They fid nyday fm ,aid "you rind start o baled, go an and 11110 your but and who you came out the bawd would be cut oR'.a Agent however, confirmed to he the mainstay of Pick,, - mg and the Joan control SI mid or first Spring mfr, In IXSI or Pmt F ma. Joseph Calera,, Caned BaaW:n, netl Farm Me- Coaenl:le n thegoarning match Thr ale John Cwrl wmam miller ala Arda, Pdkir n:, immymu n for bet, The all for 1951 t rt Fm .. key,. Trust tt. Wlme and seldom Malar. For the following year Ed, anver BImJI loam Clerk. WIIIIam began, John planar mal Hama B:Nan w e dee d, and a Strong Fnuw s hed :t Peder Heads Homlat Cmtav Hackedw6 Wage) ,it u PWI rd:mv ata C Steel' s Node[. Norwsed (Ciceroni Alan Clark m `Coll maven the soars. free 44. The minutes of me Socialy, top to frood the decisions or its officers, also provides a history of agriculture in the township. In 1850 harder the ploughing match. four stallions were gown In 1854 Oc minutes record that there has been "n new importation of sheep of Oe Leicester and Coaxed heard by William and John Miller ,it than the imported heavy hi "Orotic Buchanan" and' Merry Farmer' have WIM1 M1eee wrvim_ the township durwg his last skean . Then aka rind impro ml in matrix cultiva ble. Farm mail oma,[, rare shown at no spring flow, made probably by hlacksmiths ormillwrimas such a5 Abu Buyer[, whose half built in the 11... or, a1,11 xmnds near the newm Claremont consao e area The Society set up permanent fair grounds in Brougham in 1866 where township fairs wum held moth 1889. An 1867 fair (here seem cloven claws for hi ranging from saddle Image to a span of heavy caught horses. TM1ere were two came classes And in Na northeast suction the following seem shown and p[ius tige Wooden Hatmsys let Fred RoaeF Iron Harrows be fool Roach Intl John Wilkey Double lumip diml led John Forfar Holes rake bar Michael AmkM1ulder Ind 2owhnriaM1 pollard gat of draining [Dols le Grow Walters set or how shoes calked Is Gmas Graham Ind Jno Wnikey AM: of team Imrness 1st Sax. Digby get of single homes Iat los. Digby 2nd Smpcn Groves One down hand lot recommended I W. McGregor In the lived clnss: 1O Her mntip wait 1st Alex McKay end Joe I Davidson I bushels clover seen Isl Alex McKay A nate is spender which reads: Hams — the games exhibited by Mr. Jas. Digby of Clare- nmerasd a set of heavy substantial le se harness and breach band, all nicely out nchica Mc Digby has ex- hibited at Be different township spring fairs this lag sixteen years and line always h euivnd the fnt prim, aM for such perservence we certainly think be is entitled to a lot of entertainment " • From 1867 mpn or any Figedna Auj int index 108 Besides its eHnrs, in maintaining a township fair, tTheSociety was mnnua ml N bringing in a better class of Lorimar. In 1854 the directors Purchased a prim ball "Lord Photo' from Cobour8 which dry later sold to I. C. Staling of Greenwood. In the same wor the Millin of 9magham brought out two SMMams and one Galloway from S gland winning first prize t the Provincial Exhibition in Londnn. At the same Lima they imported Bob - Roy their fins Clydesdale. which was followed by ••almk Dart', and -Comet The April Society. recognizing the contribution of such importers to the improvement of she wmeae passed a orme of thanks to William Miller for his contribution m apiculture an We Township. In the same year the Millers brought out than bar shonhorms, William Cochrane brought cora Clridesmle stallion ^ear wawa¢". These evidri of township prosperity wen a plmuant change after the uncertainties of the 1840's. Eghteren fifty wmal out to be a good year An early genial spring was loffic lby a delight- ful sumnmc Tha hnrven was unusually large and in all parts of the province was gathered m with scarcely any dominate, from bad weart By 1852 rho ran of depression had been for- gotten and good limes had o rncd. The mature for prosperity in Pickering Township ware many. As has been mend ... d about half die land was cleared nad major eultivatioq We fapWation s almost as high mit as going to become for another ewsoy- five yams. from I860 It gradually death until 1914 when it s about what it bad been m 1840 (4,500): and Low who lived in the township auto skilful, ingenious and fli to prosper, At that draw Thmmto wtyal of other towns rumor than an all encompassing metropolis, aad more than one Beano document of new Liverpool an tranchmans Ry. WMIe the repeal of British preferential arriRs in the forties worked a hardship on wheat measure and exporter for a while_ the growing Mtnican states soon twit up the slack and appeared t0 have an insuliable appeme for products at tic Canadian and and torn!. The inorganic of the St. Lawrence oamb, in 1949 made it passible for schooners to sail from Cake Onmdn to the seven as: but for the most prof tmlFe was across the lakes to Oswego. Barbara, and Rmbestee While the canals and locks were Janne fault they provided employment for men and hews, but before their full value to Canada was realized the men and board who bad built them were vying to put hem out of business by building the much faster and mom flexible railways. People who lived in the mitltlk of the [set century were faced with a more vexing problem In the realm of railways than them at mid -twentieth ernmry are with their super highways. The rai]- way increaxd the speed of tmal by 1,0]0 per ant i cream ld for whereas it was a gmtl team winch, hauling one wagon maid maintain a 6 mile par hour paceof len or twenty cris had little Manage In doing forty maks train hour. Railways could go where Man could anti were mom fleuble in this xnse and in the by that they could have nations where they pleased rather Nan where a suitable harbor offered' they could distrose of large shipmaon N ow load add mWq of course, carry a hour mmdd¢ of pascngen and be on time regardless of the atonal It hand t0 many people as though the unfair would proside nn mawa W almxt May problem of transportation that was buldingback the promas of the country. Much village mw unit Mountain a city and every mill and factory saw new prospects for "million opening out borrow it. Besides an meso considerations. Nose never has Man on enter- post atenpoise in Canada promoted by Inch a remarkable group of !nen as come who sold Canada her railways. The fast railway pmjecmd for this area was the "Port Whitby and lake Much" Railway which one approved ut a meeting in Whitby In 1852. It was to van from Whitby to Stmgmn Bay on Lae Humq and an offer was made by Sykes & Co, to build it if the newly created County of Ontario would basic a loan up to IORM) per mile. The municipal election of 1851 turned Od the railway question antl Pitman, tworepresentatives to the County Council. Mr. Louden and Mr. Taylor were elected on an anti railway voh. TM16 is not surprising as the line was not t0 come closer to the Township than Whitby or Manchester, and the Rmbaro and 110 Wharf Co., and Pickering Honour Company had just �. i extensive work to nuke Frtntliman's Pay a rival of The Prom of railway India, nlwa mphasiod Ne fact Ibm me railway "would no t the urinary u .earns'. although they waned wwty backm8 for f=l8noll. and nmms firm every ownshlp and vlllwec vloty the If,, the drool Whitby to Lake Huron line, m rap dm richrt s of Lake Sri w Talon had hoped to do in 1680. nils vot�complit,d. but earned instead forward Pon Fury aad Llnddy, baa- opnnl in I8]]- Meanwhile the Grand Trunk joining Geduld to S ruin was being pushed forward rapidly and crossed Pickering in 1855 and '56 along a line ,]mast parallel with the 1A,,e , On August 25, 1856 tl¢ first p'asego,tn frau Toronto to Oshawa and was greeted by cheering crowds at every station. It opened a new eta of prosperity for the mnmhip_ CHAPTER XIII ONTARIO COUNTY The tremendous --crown in population and industry in Upper Canada during the 184WS rasa@tl in the formation or new couo of as emm[al Osritts along the lekest In 1851, by an January at Parliament, 14 &ld county of York which vied into force more unemy Is,rk, Choose old rounly of Yolk wxs divided into Nree churches, York, vimmso and Poel. Hy p[mromvtihe LordNeve Elgin focused moves s of Provincial COURCounty. Councils from Nc Neves and deputy County go er then County. Crianry gavemment which began cost an argument over IM1e Imntioa a1 the county town and the from that t day t county nuinl- i Became me Ontam, its u t It (tom Inco rd present. Bacons Ontario County an sonNernsot,cowardly, soy two area has wide y and is 66 miles from north to lannouth,@esou@em area ort always had b fighwhich, h, keep from L iha a map pulesed by the northern townships, the which, o decy de not county Ne population 10 or aren4 neve We voce m tlecitic how rounly luntls me w be Mr, W Me W. H. County Printed, cit in io 85 fist representativesedseparation m the to a conal County Council in 1851 oppose) be,"submitted a wase fumy beck,torsc the quefelt tionper M1atl nmanream K of the York. county felt r admallyinistrative ILL the reason bd new diian tram York canary far vminregale purpwu M1N new of assessment, s changed assessment,couldtrow mire of ficquare av- dinge o(nmen of m e ruled could throw more otOm fin- cih burden of the new countywar iu wuWmnmml mwnahily which townships would population d and the if them while Inc northerly , Mich woultl dont w the everreown t of t and Ontario Hawewr Mt. es Michell's madan went down a defeat and Ings, County, administrative raiiv on electoral old familiar with two ridings, became an ed admiNsative urea. The al:l Ouhitl Courcils had been abolished n the same year that the new counties look Control, M that now there was actually a new kvel of government for the Nifilmom of some of the functions of the old DisWct Councils and now of Nose of We TmvnsM1lp and the Provminl GovemmrnI For e- thic the County Cautious bought wine of then ...laminal mads which had formerly been the responsibility of the Provincial Government. Townships took over the on mation of whools, which had been alarge m u District responsibility. From this time, administratively, mere Cox been little change in the three level govemmenMI Intent, although the camiug Of Confederation added nnothcr layerm the afternon in 1862 Flow - ever the oma, of responsibility whlcM1 tial. ... igned to the various levels If governmant have changed in importmee over the years. Reads hmv become major items of expenw, education has taken an affaising proportion of taxation while the, onfraliumman of rsat Toronto, of Cowes Gould, the but'(aunty Warden forced and wrought to wmml, has gone on opaw in spite of the institution, of tie County between Township and Provincial Gov At tl¢ township love) the Conester net longer calls out this reen m do their period oftlntme label un the township mode, bur the eyeasr is busier than when he had to asess chatres along with buildings and Iwda. The township ales has now to seper- sea the nctivilies of number of people whercre Hector Benton, the first clerk under the new freem of administration, calls also tax ciAlector and reviewer The Superintendents or Pnhlie schools appointed cam Rev. A. W. Waddell and the Auditors were P. F. Whitney and Georgy Begg. The eleoma rctumed W. H. MicM1ell m prove, R A. Parker as Deputy Ravq and Frederick Green, Peter Taylor, and Joshua Wins, as Councivors for the year 1850. Although The County of Oomrio wan created in 1850, County booties oontineed to be does by the old York County officials for another three Years. In 1854 Canada and Yolk Connors w separated for rd- va purpose, In this Year The Pkkedng Council passed umber of by-Iaws whicM1 provided fm the local control of local u1GLs of which Lend Eton had sooken. LNablteds of the mwm ship were Taxed C400 for the upkeep uI roads, and at the some Lion it %as made possible toetelabor on the roads by the payment of two shillings n ad sevenstatute Pence for each eight hour day that one was obliged to and. 'faverns and .haps were licensed The fee was 110 for those on the Kingston Road and 0 for all ethers. Taverns were to 12 no FMIP-- . __. nliif6 Farrchmam Bny, Tmeni, Muir A,,, existence. 196/1 pmvide six clean comfortable beds, W pmvidc liquor, ule, Le:, or cider: to be kept by sober respeemble persons and In wa'.oi the Lords Ony. If the session wne on the Kingston Farm it miehl has licensed if it lutl four bedrooms, two strong rmms and lour beds elsewhere. Ssarckecien were not pmmined to sell liquor. A number M new uhoob seem built in the Rbool 4esrons at Greenwewi, Oaobanm, Knolls. Audley, CTerrywwd, Brougham. Mt. lion. Sue Line, Omck Road, Pickcrim Villup and Ilw Whitby-Pckenn6Tosvnline Union &Fool. Many of thew chant.. III product of oro prosperity andwnmed population e( the Heads, continued in use for analMr century. One of the important oeliom taken by the Ad u minionaian Fad been to set an with which We Township m et me cost of education. Under the York County by-law which imposed a tax of E2,279. 35 7d, Preening 'Pown,hip paid 056, 6s, 36 To Make theequitable the nosy was divided in ahool c web meet inspect and 'ah. n 1850 The electrical ridings were lobe the lemodarin Iof Wer churl circuitand nas rw m wiN on the elrcuh to pay fair the inspectois for snnttlinn of the pin. Ry -law an. 41 laced by she Township Council In 1853 gogdcd for the wooss- ment of school sucturu 10 pad achers' salaries. &coon 3. which 114 IammM1an ffolnw; teacher, I957 no, pan of Brea 2was esszard £25_ - Fees wemself Is. 96 per pupil per, nmb and harbor, ealaes 301, 180 per year. In Toronto they were about Md. By 1860 the pattern of modmo elementary school education had been pretty well eawbUrbed. Each aGmal scelim eluded its wb, wee responsible for the maintenance of the mhool The tall and od by entsera of teacher's' us proAees. TM1e school tax, suppled med by a Educational tioncapaliom msain w carr d o t by ted the by @e mwnah hard Lduenloial sInspectors w aped out by the lair clergy umil Provincial duaravtors u e aoin¢d Even of the accrual memi.T In I867, to, mn mined a rtheaddbllhy of lbe 9rofa continuation on TM1c Principal new development wm rbc addition, in In 19 of a mnlin ct Hi shM1ool at Claremont. organized In 1968 u Uleldm High School was orgnnbed wIIM1 a board m u40 to Naam,m sold ler we Granmood Stlmo11860. reserved from county, township, school sudor and village reprevutadves. Pickering District High School, which opened in September 1952 was followed by Ajax High &pool and in 1961 by Hartmann High School with a total high school population of 1,200 students. The churches of the township multiplied dung the first tall of she century. The following is a breakdown of the census report of 1850: Cturch of England — 1,033 Church of Rome — 519 Church of Scotland— 821 Free Presbyterivn Chu¢h of Canada — 60 Other Prabpermn Church — 178 W¢kyau Muhods[s-211 E. P. MethWirts —144 Other MMM1Wisb — 190 Congaegmumal— 66 (umbers -222 Maintains, — 119 AN other Denominations — 161 No Oenominadoa — 1,202 These people wul as their various swims of worship in but serxn churches which had been built prior to 1850. The Baptist 116 church on conagism VII, Presbyterian at erouphnm and one or Pickerimp Ne Roman CTlholic at Pickering, Friends Meeting House a Pickering, SI. Campos Angli om at Pickering, a Mi mat church at Sahara. (Na, awrmptiom sear to Mae and In schools er in pm'nlc burns. Boom the foes and siaties ww me faddish of many aware churches. indeed by 1970 them appear 10 have been Iwenty4wo ehorchcs mile the vNuges and perhaps amahor tan in the villnya of the township. This wua mount the park W what Mgbt In cal4d protesmmism most wild_ for m Use log far krars d IM mxury there ween a summer of unions among Methodists, Prtxbytcnans and Rfir which reduced the number of churches and eonycgmions cm siderably. The earlier multiplication of congnptmns was as ayrupormatic a the varietl 0600S of We prople as the latter unions wem of their gradual consolidation MHO me community. Early orders. and their clergy me, had came from Ammons, English, Sco1ish and Irish bml¢hes of the va Is don and attempted an a Io var mve what they considered! important n their reassure; immune. N time want on the dim o h mo assuages than read and Ie s u of churthea or f the "me denomination secure brought gbaam. Two every; of mid century were important for Weir effect in launching PielerNB Township on a twenty very period ol pros - racily. The Qimean War which began in Ik53 and mind the price of wheat m $2.50 1 bushel. and the Reciprocity Treaty with Methodist Church, Schell, 1849 due United States, signed in 1854 which encouraged mhtle to thus back aid forth memo Like Ontario from the harMn on either side. Primarily which before with a rise in the price of wheat soon verflowM into the villagesan am ney became available. The flour mills, too, sees busy, turning out twenty-five demand broadly of floor. The saw mills put out five milfmn fact of lumber, the fulling and caMwg Mills, tweets -five Nousand mumt of wool, and the tannery ten thousand hides. Most of the¢ pmdutts were Malcolm out of the township but Ilium war a number of iMustircy which used loval products and employed local Inbm. Ahmed, in 1869 had a shoemaker. Robert Rohettso . who actually made shoes, a carpenter M. Key, a cabinet maker, Sam Burkholder, and a miller Sam Mainlander, besides the hotel propnmon Andrew Brown, the leacher Donald McKay, and Thomas Meridiem the genenl merchant. At that me Alan was a village with a Post Olhm and Store, Beside had only a Pon Office, in charge of Robert Dodds, as did Bingos where Isaac Tumor win Postmaster. Bromdeam was a thriving community will two drctoq Thome Assisting M.D., and O. W. Peter M.D. It had two daughter. Rev_ T Smbhs (Wey w r,) and Rev. ]a. Talton (Carrier) and teacher, A C Herrick. There was a area manufacturer W. Bentley, a Names a saddler. two wagon maker, o adults ware factory, a loaner, a planing mill, loss hotels hourly three general Mertz and a number of drcs makers. Kinsale where John Fviness was coamxaor had A wall and harness maker. a carriage and wagon maker. Claromont had two clergymen, Rev. C. Snd[urd (Primitive Methodist) and Ree. Thus. SNbb (Nulryan), aacher.Capitol Hoer ppAnd r umbu, of industries. drive or a Capitolcommill, a thbglo factory, a saddler two paper outlets, A shoemaker, Lee milers a pn"pa t prn a pump miScr n ban taker a until keepef� well this al m mlm Uunburtn n had 0gal spans, mddlar uavRA wJur ale¢the, deWor nIntel kryv u' Atoaster, ] mUmn Holmes, Land In the evemmy war valued It $50 p umc %J:mh414tam, which had already reached a pelmirion of IN hatl six dorgymen. pop. Conary human Catlett), Rev, A. Kennedy (Presbyterian). Rev. Mrckridge (C of E), Rev_W. Ross (Cha. of Scotland), Rev. Stubbs ( Wes lc)un), Rev. Williams (Hlble Challenges). Albeit Peter, was the macho, Clirabmb Whiting n s laelua rcss and there Was thriving milling Steps" (two mill,), two helps opomted by Andrew Mown and Richard Leonurk four ur,puAiwy a controls levo h, wnmm makers, three hlaolstrhba. five general Blares. three dmkrw ,,, a snuclei two botcher shops as well as mil linen. Insists wW odmn wlm M1ad bunaems In the village Pott Union had its hotels kept by The, Laskey and losoph Maan and William Honminp was the school teacher. (11,111,0 and Olaebmrtl, ok 3. Rouge HE was a Post OMm add Whiment, which was '14 miles farm Whitby, the County Towed, to which place it is can- ned by daily stager" was a prwperoue m nulaeturing entre. It award a adding, a planing mill, a women mill, a steam un- dage money, a cheese factory, a cabinet factory, a wren Shap, a musemge, a ohm inn o r, v weaver — besides all the regular tmdesmen, saryentvs, blacksmiths, tailors antl others who were found in all many town and village. The days of the ONes and sutiq were mile great On" of the mills, and were great days to for the we and spinners Pwple were now wealthy enough that they did of consider home- spun it they could gm factory made cloth. One of the rally weavers was las. Howie of &nuglmm who brought his loam fund Sm - land about 1849. He wove rugs and wool, Plaids, correction. and fine wwlcm for these who could afford them and many a acquie or budding pendant prince Simons army trick the vnahip's earliest totems is arrayed in the product of Howie hours Covetleu orm often made at hot a late dale, n the Jacquard looms which ware common even mo last century, and many rid families still haw blue and while and red and whim tied spreads mode on these towns. In 1850 We township produced rim thomand yards of fulled cloth and eleven thousand Yards of fimmel under does not Seem to gave been a popular Product as little Ilea was grown add only a couple of hundred you& of linen cbtlt appear to ham been made in any year. No doubt the dinilhey helped to liven many a barn raising or ploughing match as the township's single distillery lamed out al- JWot eighty thnusimd gallons of whiskey in 1650 to be divided tong IN as thousand inhabitants. This would allow thirteen gnllws for each resident, Including the sitm hundred School children. But immigrimmigrationpenimmigrationb movements were marketing stronger and. is is likely not much of the Ideal product was ea earmal Amusements not all lubricated with spirits. In early listener there wart may pulls and summing off parties in Ne spring when the fires were biasing hot under the maple syrup kettles. In Summer picnics, fairs earn m sing bees and mowing bees pro. aided a around of rcamm an grating register. form wiener even- ings were re whiled away m checkers in in many farm and village homes .Dancing has .9waw heen Popular and hetet the hi -0, a fiddle rr a harmoeim or own just a good wbiselu was often t m rough to keep ewmad t going for hours a time. Whitevale and Brougham birth had beau bands in the sibut antl Claremont a few years later. The Clare,nonl band, recently I30 Bel Haum, Biwp,4nm 121 range Ho"Rix eem in8 raved, used to travel to fwtx and other events in de own wagon which wan lure, sold to a gypsy band, and rumor has it that the wagon was can years later in North Dakota. Outdoor sports, swimming and doing were papular with the generators from very early more, while baseball (zacer) was the game for dear older brothers. Crktet waz introduced in the sillies, and nourished for a time in Gteenwwtl, Brougham add Qafemont Cement also sae played concessively. But of can=, the heal of all was to drive in the cutler behind I gwtl fest have, with roar best girl at your side and take Itw to me box social at the church, For the churches became the conte of much of me aneial life or the cnnnvnlde as dear formal natural meeting pence, and the smirch choir, the mans peoples society, the ladies' aid and the semi annual bees for kn iug up the church yard, bronchi people heather and provided offer - enables to meet friends and talk over tie news Funerals we of m ting for the whole ro unity and people firms be and wide came to pee mspods. Be- fare o-fart darting back home they nsvolly had a Rotch or soppy 122 providetl by the friends and neighbor, of the bereaved and the recession became a kind of room of all Me had frirnds of Me famJy. In many respects Mie old chairman, which is disappearing in ur day, am a grant comfort to those who had suffered Me bss and helped b show Ne eoncem of the whole community for the br mawment of any me. Weddings p .... had n marc intent oo for getting together and the solcmmity of the service was not allowed to dampen the high spirits of the guests. Pickering w.'u brought up on a diet of political speeches of one amid or another cad, arrange a, it may seem tmaay. Latewng to political oratory was an accepted way of posing Me time. Men cook their politics seriously and in the abaoce of much news form the outside world the politics of the command, Me county and the ptovww absorbed a great doh of nitevdon. It mum sew to many a township dweller of today that out decanters enjoyed talking aMtrt what May were or were nM going b do more than actually Clwc"U'le Much. 1895 Lrsxou consists, 1854-1961 K;nvale hour Build foriag it dono Be[ we most remember that patterns, moves and methods of doing thlnpj were being hammmed out in the nao- month ronmry d ich have become accepted pmaix today, wave of elect, paham arc almost due for a mexaminatina in the light or changed circumstances. mmmas aid dust ammemena the medicine show aw m, does •x he included. Now medmiw vendors attended all fairs null provided entertainment for the crowd, but the b¢t of all, perhaps Infamous, it was mor, was, the anus. Sllin[e Mill, i'ieled^gp 1970 Z Ilk lip I fill s _ _ ,..,. F (" f rtop ,'`i. ,� Ilk un,n lmbeny On lune 28, 1832, P. T. Rarnums Circus with len elephants and a baby elepbam and a hundred and ten horses and ninety en performed m Whiny vad then mored the next day to Mark - hem. The Rail Rwd, the Rrmk Road and every other road they travelled most Fave had its harder of wide eyed youngsters as the dossns of red :rod gold arcus wages; the elephants, the Iprsemcn and all the bright many main their way from one town to the other, This was the begimarm of cirrus days, which owe titsnext half ,mu c bmugm together seminar, riders, flowers, admd loaner, aW shumos from all over the world 126 ROUGE, DUFFIN, HIGHLAND AND PETTICOAT WATERSHEDS ABOUT 1861 m1 mTMA4VE wmofvgXcvDC =VAIM P uJ CHAPTER XIV OVER rH£ HUMP The boom in wheat price produced by the Crimean War came to an end in 1957 and be ¢mlu of an over opumis is expansion pogmas began m be felt barnstorm Upper Crowd, and, especially 1n Pick er..-Imn,lop Lumber price, had ako dy begun m dttline and logs for the winilh rt te nocturne 'a Brite harder to gel as the Innd was cleared bvher and further back: winds The normal; of We Bridch matter to Baltic ober nada the mgr pmdm of Canadian mills los acceptable than the more mcly finished lumber from European mots. Harvests, Canadian dcmwd aunihed hand and the Americans continued to Wks Canadian lumber. People were beginning to complain that cops rvam not as good s they had been, War the land was "sunning at However all We complaints evere soon forgotten with We uhawk of the American Civil Wer. At first Nine was same uncertainty arms Canamas position w the conflict but this soon became clear and r orders from the nothem United Stats kept mills humming and mccumged fanners to put mom land into wheat. The American war, in all war; have done, husband]husband]iutlan. Hibernian and by be time it was formal the day of the schooner sloganas a competitor no the steamship w almost over. This "grand ahaMship ons my prospect of ship budding in Nckminh based an its lumbering industry. The railways, Im, had improved in very may. Better Boiling, more containable cv nines, larger fragM con, and heavier melte combined with the experience which mm had accumulated in Weir question made milmads not the h rchous dens but the competitors of We Pike carriers. Pickering bad a much Imger interest he pmmonng Fenchmms Bay as a pert Wan it had m We Grand Trank Railway, m amoral starts were made to school send improve the harbor mallow; in 128 T v F,eopI oar. 1870 n effort to meet the competition of me noway line. From per coaly sixties to 1875, the harmor remained almost unseal but in than yew me tmvnahip spent $],OCD as a boons to the Pickering former Company of Dr. Wm. McGill and Mr. 1. MCCkllan. The following year the company got an addiiionnl $6,000 after a pedaled was presented to the armed by me mammon of the wnsblp. This moulted In the construction of a paint a what and a 50,000 bushel elevalor at the Buy. The company claimed m book spent $60,000 on Impmmmen¢ and wag given a humid, ken of b30,000 in 1878. Pvcililics a rise harbor wene used for the shipment of barley and wheat and red impomation of mal from the United Slates and resulted for a time in the fragment of a Gale vllam at the Bay with two botch and nu ties Icomes, some of which am still being remained by descendants ar the early harbor Wmkem. William O'Brien was the best lighmouse kceper. At not, time wagons Used the read from con Bary to liverpeol, wailing to unload barley for the bmweries of the Unieed States, llverpool, which its founders hoped would bxmm a rya like Its namesake, bowed a hotel, a bank and a oulinaph omcc, but @m impoeifwn of a duty on Barley closed oil the market and Pickering harbor Began a slow radius which w aemt aeleed whenTm'nnm ceased using chummed aice was the last slorrehooker compared from the lake. The lighthouse , do arae ice houses, bailer moms and all the pilings of me wharf ad gale. But the bay is boli or boats again as pleasure craft of every sift and show final the sheltered harbor where Democratic spent a x'et and stormy night in 1687 a fine Piave to escape mo fury of Lake Ontario As the American West spread up, wheat mistak ; in Pickering Towmhip felt the effects of the competition which came from free land and improved methods of cuirassier, The American railway of the Pacific Caen was completed in 1869 and won the gone hard when[ began to How into the cancan market and as the means rolled west again, they took the families and indi"dwis who coald n0t afford to buy Ontario farms or who wanted to make v fear start, out to the new frontier of the American West. A few years later Western Chard became aompetitor with TM1e completion of the Canaria. Pacific Rabby in 1885. This line, prommM by Toronto linanuen and Monvcvl railway mag - miles underwnnen by the Canadian people, providrd a necessary link imtwcen East and West. It proved to be an outlet "TM1e fail" mom is bine Was as a recene S/TTYTON GROVE M the yeas 1843 W lanes 1. Davidmn al Aberdeenshire. Soif.. id partial parof Lal L C'on 8, la Phkan Township and bail o log haea (m ntr Is ns When the land m 6eAp' cleared the field ensure were put else to be lend In hapding a Inr4er Glac It a late do¢ 1n 1865 Mr. Dawdso engaged William Pearson of And, han,a sena......., to hmld las trim,tell . This lady erae.held i ma.m%t al IIr h serer raea.ma n. .e e Hill kM a e alhis are do ads aver beewear lmwry lath and Oalnb the van of 5363.00. 7Te another used in the dais rwa ernek Tawemnlp ,,it rz oned for 10 ye ,red. Tho back bake nrren and she .rnnp and av in the cellar and the an, f eplave save, anon v.d In 1 land io year,, Ti c rhino bah e added 13 u+ .Ice rdo The i he sheIt . naphea'ot Mr. WNlba Pe. bmhda,Thee Irk it On addition a less III, l well.abowe_ (Or the growing industries at the corruption cantina in Eassan Canada but it merely Friend We farmers farther back into me which may had Men Sn¢ 1870. Evrn me muk soon began demanding ham western spring wheat. Various eapMients were hard by Pickering farmers to improve thew lm. The best pine and hardwood had ban maltreated and Neniant wooblms were cut owe strip and again to try to Pickupa little mote ready cash. Cardwwd was cut and said and much of me land, which had remained as cut over bush was net clean and planted in crops. It is significant that many ,OM [immss" of the pend are remembered as gold aminate men or that$. More i iveeshed farming was introduced and a Mmng impetus given b the development of gwtl horses antl cattle. The alloys induatry, was just whirling to open cut although coal cattle and dual purpou aypes had Mvn Popular for mine time. lames 1. Priicion brought out a ]urge whereas of Shorthorn% signed bulls and sixteen we bear] Silly= Swtland in I883. A year later he brouomout fifty-three. His phase, and that of his herds- an, lames L junior, his and, is well known among cattle men of North Amcricn Arthur founder of Greenwood else imported shorthorns from S mlmud as well as Clydestlales and pure bretl sheep. The Millen inmM to expend their cattle branding and impormd a variety of pritt animals. Toreador at Lenpy Kingston Road, 1910 1. Geo. D. £cke,. 2. Bob Hom, 3. Ran Clark, 9. Wnt. Allmvay, S. men Smrcml, 6. DemnlaO'Cwmnr. ]. Bill Gordon. S. Tom Greg, 9. Satdy Burd. 10. Bob Dilbngham. Il. Geo. Tolima, Il. Alex CmlAen, 13. Jim Garcia,,, Ii, lot. Callao, 15. A.£orsyohr, 16. Jim Harvey, 17. Torn Lon. 18. Chas. Margtm, 19. Hills, 20. Name not brawn. On Tueadag lune 16, 1870, John Miller or off from Whitby with a tlmh for there hundred Woods and with story fin gold overcome and foot dollars in his packet to buy cattle. After travelling around England and Scotland fe arrived back at Liverpool on Sunday July 31m, prepared to bring Ms livestock Sunday July 31 1870 — "Liverpool: crowd, on the tlrcms driving cattle all day I improve for market an Monday, u gwtl may from Ireland and sheep day. Rooming omnibuses all day morly, men preaching and lecturing on the streets, cgt0e, sheep It pigs along way apart. Cargo at value market all bat Iwo and they are Lies ses iepirximry abrtp we bought tram 04ka hw0. of Luton St, near wlrcre We v cul is lying, Pigs at Dusts dock, Five of the sheep don't know where they are. Monday Aue_ Ist 1870_ Very waran, after badly the pigs at Date, dock went over m Birkenhead & found the rive sheep. Bought them ant to the other coal, David Grant and me finding them all From there we had to go after the pigs & bring them op o Ne velli & tram then had to go for the cattle. I would leak it would be oven miles, brought the cattle up and gm 5 of them an Eomd tonight— Two calves and 2 caws on share. Black on board all night lying any where and everywhere. It mems Noll as m coed in my Bfe. It Imo to h done. It appears a hard raa.r This. Aug. 2nd. 1870. Stated in again inn when it is gcwng a little light this m r log for the banner Very warm. Got sheep dawn m dmes tile ad had them on de odr & o[bewas Is calm before any of our own folks came to my ministers. Running nil over food after that. Paying passage & one thing & another get back to ship again North American. SWM1s far Quebec at about 2 O'clock afternoon. All right when star, stock on board for my- self: 4 — 2 -year old heifers 1 — yentlick — 2 better calves 4 — n — 32 ewes, 36 in all 4 — saws, 2 War pigs Wrote n letter to hale. Aug. fib — had, tough but not an very rough until about 2 dclwk aftere om The, It come ona Perfect gale bound to be hold. Could all knaked down, nearly, over ragai and o n, ut breaking oof their places. some of them Expecting to lose them ad. Dy', horse got nerdy over M1k glee, had to hold him up for the warrant pan of him was down. On his head, more Is him both down several tinier Awful storm, vessel like going on. du altreptho , sea coming over in all directions, calm broke boom. I cosmic It horse & ether ,in 1 was drenched as wet as if I bad been in else sea. Water tanning over a long note. Theo went to bel thinking bow the novel would be over. Simon Bomtio, a repand), nor the mon could do anything, Male & sailors stuck well in. Aug. ph Smoother this moming bre dil very rough. Cattle & mmp look very bad, Same of @nn look ns they would net ltve, especially two of omovns. Men resulted again, got cattle watered & fed again. Sea calming down sear noon a birds, Eating nothing myself, act at the table today at all nor supper for night, Sick all day. Hoping to be home soon from my wry bean with what 1 can get of cath Aug. 12, Thai clear in the morning, for a Biller and then fog act n If ship starred again. Cleared IT again nWut 10 a Stoned about Peruvian came Net Our shin about Boon bound for Quebec. A great many passengers on board 4 o'clock Rury a beautiful day row. Ship going an nicely. M N.Ce beat ram died this mool Qtda doing middlingly end, sheep soma of them, not doing well at all. Pip doing well. Better a amid deal myself, better appetite. Saw mote very large ice berg Inlay. Near some of them_ Sea smooth. Near night one of my beent ams hard I sup- pom his death nnstM by Nc down lust Manday. 134 Aug. 1MF, Monday, come to Point Lucia wharf about 10 o'clock m. got ¢II mate and deep act of the N, American. Cot them aboard the (min rmred for Richmond about mo alwk very busy day and v and at night No end of Paying again, Zse for cal rum, Minutestothe mate mi M1ad wine saves foicsxr atten- of(he storm las( Monday, antl w others fortheir money o whethe [aloes and digs. @tpeng o mte They owned nee some r Rey xeve done for Thiat film(. In rack,lite to have some paid for. Passaee far three cars m in Qxk. Tu xdnyht August 17: Bet( rum lying dead in the carthisdisappointment at daylight r and went info it. lo Urea( Imt and tlThenoabout 5 Sold him for a doom and lhalf le Richmond Then photo 5 even In This morning got bout 4l, left soon afteterrnoon Nin for d for rap :ted nr1Il (M1nrc about d o'ebek and Stoned for Kingston myll ' o'tlw'k pot after warthog and ndtba.y o oma m anvmm r( toil ar little o cut bin nli(aq mo. amA hfc (lap No sleep end ,a I am to eo f them Things lookine rather slim no o part of Al the walla (rkoof(hnnl WNnco Ki Aug Il:—Niloen o'clock (Lan. dinner 4:'dock m Kingston about eleven o'dnck and dinner had need of too, ck Kingston about even life p. mr on our way for Dulfin's (heck. Hunts looking bud, wen Ilw (wo es I have goiThurw. about August 18:—Arriare It in the Cook this morning ingb 3 o'clock The third rzwe dead is the rat. The otterlook got the bud. to some s, the ewesand one of ter heifers me got Nem up (o n and go (Lad up Can. 1). had a e! Bot breGot tom Neu and ernmend thistle a litand oun ethe neW of i(. Go( hmne ea th nd that t agoodthing !after nine all enjoy ins gold lawn and Na( hat a sofa Mins pour tone welts 1and 05 (wf en5s absence. paha for cane lids 2 calves f 6 36 sxni £108 E3 each. 6 pigs — f 18 myself £ 15 for a man — £ 5 Willie's sheep — £ 30 for other fees —15 sbillinss. Total £185, 15 sludiiril The demand for bailout for the West and for the increasing Tough: on Toronto greets made he= Including a lucrative as well as an Interesting bmincia to bar in. The GnFam brothers 'Takrn you the Mu of fabn Miller in Iwummn of Hoµ Millo. tlrommew 18a product car Lida demand. They settled at Claremont about 90 and three years later agm to impoa many, -Royal Ex income', 'Ti Ardmi' and "MacOman", were among their most famous horses. The iodine each owed a special Whim in making their businea, prosper Robert was known a an expert judge of horses all over North America having print classes of one hundred Russia at Chicago. Tran was the showman and was always able to bring at the lest pomp in an animal. Old timers remember Will Graham driving his part winning team of hark - my stallion to Claremont Railway station each [into the arnin iniwH with visitors from all over the world who had come to buy the famous Gmham horses. Nelson Wag. tanker remain of Claremont wan the Inter- naonal ploughing match m 1902 for Canada. In be immediate, as the importance of wheat dslinad, dairying gradually took in place and dairy cattle as well as fat cable be - Mine of income for fame". Chwor, and butler se marketed at first and gradually a market for fluid milk statim, passible as Toronto entered a period of rapid growth. It was a marketable crap from a relatively early tint, end many a picker- mgfarmer set off before daylight with a load of hay to much at the St. Cawrtnce market at the foot of lam, Street in time to catch the buyers from livery tables. notes, and carters who needed an oncimous supply of this bulky for on prnpol their thousands W M1os At be semc time otM1em were tabng apples and separate hire Toronto.Apple orchards wine planted toward the end M the century and by 19M almost every farm had apples to ell. However, the pec, seam and other diseases which affect these and Ober !mite, instantly restricted apple mla to that who willing in spay and prune and otherwise take core of their orchards so that by mid twentieth remury the farm ortbend, as a anm of income, became words very little The decline in form prices which at IM township in the revenal also was hard on the mills imd the link shops and GGOaes which had sprung hear an, mill area Many of the eddy buyer men had already moved uew must artsin the North or West and the men that they had employed bad to look bewham for work. Jordon Pi mill ceased opemtiw when he died in 1660 end his five an, all wain to the Uni¢tl States. Many of be fait time workers went wth the mJb or moved to Toronto. Most of the fare, handle who had spent theirwinters n the bueh had now to trawl ,,,on farther be the mine work at be content to stay at home and try m pick up a link extra money in aunt ether way. tie Some of the Ilonr maiden vied m Inner the dopresacd prices by Winning Panamanian. SnakeMill m Pickering, a subAancinl five Gey bfck buiifinE sew 11 111, northern in 1883. This, whnu completed allowed the call t o hundred barrels of Unix flour a day. By this re Spanks were bringing w grain by rail wall shipping Ne dieser out the ame way. In Penang Village at this tame then woe also two compare a comes who made sheets, hlankets and Mtl a shop to sell what we might call factory made sheen and linens. The Village had a couggi 5 a wonfide t, The Mental News, a Perry amble and two hotels. Honor's mill, fust south of the village was steam opened. Alarge four stony hWlNng, It uwtl home gown and informal gran and turound our about a hundred barrels of flour n day. The mill[ in Picketing continued to apatite for some years after made rc n 1883. Spatialm0 u avid to We Maple Ulf Milling Company early in IM wnmry, was closed down and wax demolished in the 1920's. Hoover was burned and rebuilt, routine hands several times. The Gas, the Wckww and Relations some successive proprietors used the troll was destroyed by fire in 1955, The story in Wourvale and Greenwood is a similar story of fire, destruction, scudding and fioapy disappearance of the built mg industry ascent for the one remaining in Whiteside. The tvw giants of the milling industry were built at Winnipeg or Fart Wtltiam, Beer the source of Manitoba No. 1 Needham or at Toronto and Moovealen ar Ne customers they ween designed to areas. fictional seemed unable an make the transition to an to. dustfialintion which would replace the primary, produces in- dustries based on lumber and wheat that had brought her pros - wily, in mid amury. The population continued to decline until 1915 when a slight opium began But it wasmdl 1952 met the population cgualkd Net of 1860. Paolein their thousands went and, somh and n the city. The villages become sleepy hamlets whom the Samuel store, the post oRCG and the blacksmith shop — sen Us be replaced by the gasnlane pump — were the main features of village life. Perhaps it might he said met the general st e. bring some - nor is the bright glare of the supermarket, is the ,nom Permanent feature of village life. Timothy Rogers kept a store which rob- ber broke in n 1801 — May have broken into many a store since, Francis Left, Michael Gleeson, John McNabb, the Loans - d coq M¢holls, were scorekeepers. 137 Through the year they Lave contributed mom than lust their e¢M1andising skill to the port of the rowvahin, They have taken ll¢ir wit in the religious and serial life, the politics and the prommum of the tonight, from earliest limes. Perhaps no dogmaper of the pas rentury was more colorful than Gorr¢ ]tenon of Green River who kept Sam and Post Office them for many yogis and be has bran described by his v, C. L. Burton in his book "A Sense of Nipent "My father as me youngest of his family. From Ns love of ran , good company and not dollars hates, 1 imagine he m o have bean allowed as chill certain licence which commonly wcard be, denied 0 older ahihlren. No was a good salesmam lit his b, ,,mc and worked hard at it wllbm certain Refinadong. lie fact ca perience of inernM1andisinR was in n Paddling wnymn That met! eular reality lots not specially high is me racial wale, but in thou days a peddling wagon was an agal link bnwecn the early settler and his fellowmen. The peddling wagon was as familiar a pert of the country wave s the delivery van of the big stores is in cities today. The itinerant merchant would drive to Toronto and stock his wagon with can- mint aaples, smallwares, handsome, doth in bolts and even obth- og,and, 4,averalls and work shins. Being mobile, he could snit his small stock to the seasons. Then he world drive me long mad book to his familiar temmry, and saw the faros, oracularly than at a distance Rival the villages, or those occupied byf ears lied by numerous cl iNren or other circumstances to can work. He was always wdmme. Many a farm wife watched to, his ming with his traveling swig as (lie modern farm ambo wmebu for the arvioul of the resplendent mail anter cahadogme, today, The mobile memi was infest to draw wherever it Well in his eagle, and stopped the night with Old hieing along the way. It war a wonderful way to learn merchandising, for the Paddler could not buy rasM1ly, beanse of his limited space; and in visiiwg @e homes of auery variety in his territory, from the wdl-evab- g and bunter down to the most formicary situated newcomer, he banal the public cave on the warrant front. A country general smm in the horse and buggy days served only a few square miles of mintuy. Meet of the made was by barley. The paennastersNp carried with it a art of guaranke of bar and once The mefchant had to keep posted on the se quiremems of the Signa 's, ensure that big Supplier,' accounts re paid up and his credit clear, so that he could abeays bay the o cded supplies. Heavy commodities like salt, ragas cout and other simple gar- , nulls and headline, warn shipped in by below Gam the answer railway station. Markham village; but giants moil cry gias antl hncygsoceries were personally selmed on trips to the city and brought home in We light wagon drawn by a goad team of drivers. A country general store could not pa[ on style". The two show windows one on each tldc of the deal, were seasonally full of "cow's brrnkfasts", as the universal farm screw hal am called, work glows, suds, Inntema, work Im[s. The part office Intl the $^very won 0, the left, as the c.staler mu md; but immediately inside We door was ms ubiquitous a sof whips.'t he stu^on Wys homed m mdr mrmw not m n tomol, tnv' 'too if racy had bewa, is wns baro her easewa any ndsniet — alae is, a my Tamm wwo r would draw. My (ether would often buy whole arises of sailing woollens, which meant that for the next taw years all the thing n children re all three) alike. As than wss m each clothing, y country stores of come days as neatly -made bold doming,ng machine, with the assistance ec could a very inferior old Howe ed sawing machine, and what aid she as tome get film domes.¢ Felt, ling these sound accustomed to ling outars of different cos said and women w m. Foot Wye of d:ofth costs had to a of the some mmsfW and gen^mhy of 1M1e same waw; Ncloo umtl c Sometimes my ray mother would M1ave to chanustomers ers work, even meals or Inc wash tub, b wait of wmnen customers owhose exp seta wove tw is hotl was tali occupied ied o expose to znline mends Shia was too busily occupied with her growing family and I know haw ever to be much use Saks and I know geese the scot womenwould share quite fbetter amiliar arewith byduem in 1M1e score, all f whom were quite (v Onar with all side, facts of life. On be a, fin site, ma rens M pfather d but [rime is chats from China, Iapvn and Asaam. My father bad a mous ha for was.blending ten — Oohoe, Yea; loans asp Omer was as Chinese s. Many drank man tea; packaged. Gunpowder was a fvvomc. The preset day demand for novers =d, ativI, Ital brands After In- wor dia bled: m eid I unkhad bun o Italian Alcor we mwW to the city reed 1 had gee^ a few }vena at work. 1 n. amen war C. IDrrin'x rs with Sts w snow, in uhleh I number Salado y efirs[ ntefrom with i6 window morins yi a, a dunce th ebony n knew from Indio. Than ecastaabo w u�'teance that Larkin knew rill about India; or at Inst ninet tlodil ten. $agog dour, soft, pork and oatmeal ea n barrels. 'and oak considerable slugging by able-bodied n en to nanJle and 139 place there "hevy" growers hems. The great trouble with oatmeal s the balk of We ams which had to be gut rid of. Minute; of Tileoabury wars the first to "kiln" dry his wall, and thus gm rid of the u,pleasant hulls. However, hulls of no hulls, oatmeal was We u scal,cl Canadian breakfast. Batter was the normal, everyday method of doing hostages. Farmers had little or no club. Butter and eggs, hien and wool re brought into the store when purchases had to be made or accounts brought up to date Cash Interactions urge the excel, ties r.alm than the rule, because pan of IM1e function of the atry storekeeper, as recently as my eNldlwad, was to serve as broker for a considerable range of farm products that he could handle, store and get rid of to buyers who regularly "me thmagh We country soBedwg these goods form the general stares. In come also, the country smrelapen would ham mIansport We produce he took in, in barer, to "a wholesalers in city and bwu or else handle We dipmmt of it by rel_ Mrtifier on his routine nips by light wagon and team w formula, to buy his n stock for the store wouN Prepay take a Iced of boner, eggs, more, wool and oan, preface, which he world first have to dispott of, on his owe behalf, in a process, ye, might say, of double -lamer. Compared, themPore, with the smrt keeper of today, who com- room afaidy simple cash or credit business, We country memmme of We wgnties and eigliics had a highly complex enterprienterprise on his hands He was a broker, middleman, agent, as well as met - chant in We present sense of We ward. He was integrated into the community 1¢ spell to a far greater extent than is the case today. He filed to know We pen not merely of We goods on his shi sbut the price of We bartered predum he took m exchange, It wss a ganglia enterprise in more respects than in prices. My father and mother had a mental catalogue of Woce farmers whose better and time were above insulation White the myority of the barmen wrote wholly dependable, and had as much pride in their produce my parents. M1atl in Weir stow, a IM1e lees buttei- would sometimes meal foreign influence, or badly shouted sections in the tubs, bidder, cracks and other containers of buffer brought into Ne some A bun metal tube War was inserted into the contents of the rob bringing out a secbon of the contents for incentives, as a miner's drill, far example, brings forth the samples of the rock. Aber Waterton, We sample was re -incurred him We solid bulk sof butter in the tub, Many a night my mother spent inm,kma over" inferior butter. My purenn wall knew those farmers whew pmtlum did not 140 come up In the mark. The tubs or crocks of butler bmught in by those iumanity seem not sampled by a simple, shalgM-0own Neu of Ne buuerl err. Alt, no: the mode his, would be those into the bulky at different angles, so any to explore the contents thoroughly. If there were badlychun¢d and poorlyworked but my mother would remove the conlems into the large wooden butte-nowl, a son of super mind how[. and with tem baun�sysagi mall corrugated psddlNilx women implosion, would potently proceed W "work" the butter, expelling the buttermilk, blending and salting and bringing the butter to a proper consistency. Early spring saw bmhel baskets of eggs up and down both sides of the store, which in my elWtllsh eyes sees any of the longest aisles in the mercantile world. Everyone had to candle eggs, father, mother, pare and house help, and even members of the young f rmity. As far as I can figure, l was only years add when I first candied eggs. As I claim some ability in telling a bad egg from o mod one, in more fields than hen fruit, I waribe my powers to m eatly egg introduction to the an. A fragment memory of these childhood experiments Nvalves the hidns which the farmers would bring to the store, n the raw state,of course, and often auction W high heaven. I can hardly maglne whet the merchant of today would say or do in such a se; bat one of my intimacy duties, as general store beeper, was to sah mese hides and artame, to transport them to Tomato at the corked opportunity. The spirit of business was that everything was grist to the mill. And the community had to be served.' Mrrl tt . TWLNTH:I'H CLNTURY PICHLR/NG As Picketing interested the Jubilee of Queen Vinoria, many ust have looked back over be sixty years and wondered what vllmm11mry held in does. Toronto was Burning rapidly butwas still a long way of. Kingston Road was mugh at times and the Rouge bill was still almost as steep as it had brain when William Clwwtt was sent out in inspect Asa OvntioM1's road a hundred years before. Farmers with verses fill plodded along its dusty milq stoppling at the halfway house to barter their vegembkv or apples, or going on over the Zang stretch of road that led past St. Johns, Noway, and down toward the ee earn trz of Toronto where market day was a big [ of dw week. Tar Newtons xcrc still holding down the mwnship cli chair; but Andrew Thompwns tavern, where Reeser Beaton bad Grd taken over his duties, was long since gone, a victim, perhaps of the march of the mmpertnre farces which had deed up the township in 1977. The Bona of Temperance had met the alcohol problem head n than middle of Un mnwry when the pmblem M dunk and dnmkensattracted attention all ac ss Ilse memory. Tim tory that there was a bucket of whiskey nd a dipper beside every cabin in Upper Canada is rationale an enumeration of affairs as Ne Qualms, the Mennonims and the Mclltodbts, to say nothing of Ne other religious bodies, had been campaigwng against the ravages of drink for many years. But there was wnainly plenty of whiskey and many tikes in ties early days when grog shops ache dotted sharp the mads about two miles card., There were ether voluntary achisciatiore in the mandate that The Masons had begun to made as early as 1972. Thee years lam, "ino,in M"o4am. Bkbnof Ki'"k. 031 I'nNrlatiun of IVY 4, 1site I. wrublp_ the Ordinatmn openetl a ladee ami were followed by the Porevea; Wilted Workmen and the Royal l'anplars of Temperance, Orange Inches were not in relive. bot transition bad been in the township same The thirties In rte eillaaes nooks w v Yearn than ever The carriage faemm, had less and les to do of the county draw In a close and Nc ]m'ncis and caryenters were Seldom called upon to make literature once the and order canals of Tin mhy inton became wamed reading for every farmersrude. Some of We Shingle mills were still operating hat Saw mills, such an them kyCol, did mumm work nnher than mass narwitil Mills at Whit, ale and Greenwood and Matsuda runup feeling the Pinch of competition but stili were able to d main a fair Royal of employment. As early as 1887, l'. P, White had a telephone in Wbacvalc and twenty years later than had home cmnmon if not common— place in the mvn.hip. so that when Ne girls wanted to arrange a mor on the new church tern¢ court,. they on do so by tdmnone in 1910. Wheat priced at the on, if the century had emc up again after the disastrous low of 64 retur nts in 1891 d whdcno farmer call ,at mlmh That by is prosperous at least he was baser off Nan he had been during tire tough days of the se and eighties antl the early nineties. Liberals said it was because Lnurio s Puce, Minister. Tories disemeed The Political anninceit which had gone on now for half century was still Bond for an - ober few years as poldoems declared that the Transom was to be Camara Cmimry. The men who had gone through the bush trails, acce in bond renry-five years earlier, cut the coca that made the sawmills hum, would baso found the twemicto century strange and mm lining. People stanchbrud themselves more refined than doh forefathers bad been and were much cigar in regard to what was proper and nice. There were cut too many people tike Tommy Thompson and Peter McNabb, who would down loots any day and drive down from Claremont to Frenchmana Bay to see if the pike were biting The new type of mocker, a graduate of Ne Normul BcMol, would More little inwin Patrick 8hadiQ who in the potties hatl been fired for ¢smarms the tavern "moaning, sono and viv_ht". For Nose who round calcium the University of Toronto, Pickering College could propane then toticulnte. This College was War by the Society of Friends on a earn- mandfinis hill just north d Ye, Village of Pickering about 1875. It was a landmark enhanced by all wlw traveled. the old Kfngsmn Road. Situated upon one of the highest points of the district the old mllem child be seen for mJn, and the students court over- took 'the north share of Like Ommih for many miles to Ne east and west. It was the successor of a Ffilmds' BmNing School, situated mar West lake in Prince FAwoul County, which was opened in 1941. The academy was incorporated in 1848 under the name of The Frkndf or QuakmW Seminary. In 1879, the staff and school moved into me new building in Pickering. About be sums of beautiful grounds with a winding unce-Imd drive led up to the fine red mad white, brik sanctions, crowning the lull. It was a co-ed auhad whoa primary students, as wall as of&r pupils werc prepared for a University emrainew The east side of moms rccupsm the whole of the accrued floor. In fire Pone a largem study-mawith stage for entertainments, and the modoms, of do Beauty wrote. On the N¢a dour and fourth Doo n the don t and club m rt mites. The dining ru and border, with moms tforhelp, as well as sinsuad in the basement. The Matron's and the Pracical's IN quarters ¢copied u wing to the nodb. In Jaz[, Nn wrong w well equipped throughout, at a res[ that was a mom moiety of the asµndimcrred by the big secondary schools of today, a splendid exampleof which Gas only a cone's tbraw, wetwartl from me old site Unfortunately, the college was burned to the ground, among the Chdatmns vacation in 1905. Needs :11 the records and equip- ment were destroyed Only die large brick gymnasium building to the forth-west with the stablm and immediate wmv wvN, This gymnasium has since been irradiated into the spacious sum- er home of Mr. and Mrs, E. L. Ruddy, who purchased We property when the directors of the memories, decided to rebuild the school at Newtnarkcc Owed to a lideaaon among the two or three Quaker bodesm the early eighties, the school at Pickering was closed from 1885 mil 1892. Many well known sensors maty eccupiod the phalli tions of Pandpal and Bmn. Previous to 1885, Mr. P. Bagsss M.A., John E, Bryvm MZ., S. Percy Davis M.A., and Wilnw H. Houston M.A., wor excessive principals. Mr. Dal died N while on e mail and his gravelies just inside the main gateway of the Union partially at Oshawa. On the [e-apening in 1892, Mr. W. P. Firth M Z„ O.Y„ M me principal. With bis wife, formerly Miss Ella Rogers 9.Z, dmagMer of Samuel Rogeq a well known Tommut figme at that than due school prospered, and broadcast grow rapidly, Students me from all over the Continent, as well as farm Japan, Rosily China, Foods, Armenia, Australia, phalli America and the Went Indict A large number of furniture Strummed from Ne career Many local students amended both the propensity, as well as the collegiate departments. In the early nioNm the attendance cued llte capacity of the building. While thoronglmess was made of utmost consideration, due school was pre<mineody a [mining residential member, when the religious needs of everyday ex a at all Bares cm phasissd m the daily exercises, and snrP^rtv ivies for athletic ce- wRmre were mpPlied is the Cymnrtsiom and on the school the rinks, and the ball fields surrounding the min building. Many cdcague ball games, with other tasidentirl schools, whas en- joyed. Aswdmion comhall as well as rugby, where the rules of that day wore not so restricted as they am today, were awarded by the 90M moral atmmphcre of the college. The Until felt for this msfimtion was never in mart am- dence,than when he 1894, and Old Boys're -union was held Over 400, hailing farm all parts of the country attended the material Pldnbtg College Ulervy Sotitly There were many goomme, From Pickenng Colleges in Picker ing who have made their mark in the various profesions. Among then may be mentioned Pad Fred Tmeg Toronto University, Pri Barker, Jahn Hopkin IJnivorsiy, Prof. C. W. Wright, School a Practical Science, Toromo. J. D. A. Tripp, Professor of Maiie Vancouver, De Samuel Lamuraua, Dr. Layfayctm Weami Oe AMur Darland til WUaVLn University and his wife. Has, Rescued Clark of the New England Styles, Dr. John Dollard of California, Rev. Ornament (Jmm of Lunuicn Rnd Harris and Joe Burns ex M.P. "romnm, and Greece McDonald of Texas oil heltls. For nmoy yoery the administrative work of the college was handled by the Nm A. S. Rogers of Toronto, Quaker tiusicos rem venous sedien of the province formed the L rd. The camy- mg act of the drM1aa or operating a century snow "in its end- less planning and purchases for the rentals of such a inner ethan?, ass for a long Gino previous to the fin, hwtdlod mon o duntly by Miss Sarah Dale, a member M a plain inrnt pioneer family of Friends in Pickering Township. The beading of the splendid Gymnasium win due to the financial announce of the Rogers families in Toronto. It was fell by the many old students and by many of Ne old friends of the school IM1m the moment to love the Capege from its controlling position on the all above was a mistake. However,M1c milees at Newmadw has made a great mntril hall o Ne reluctant influence of Canada_ But the spirit of the old Co-ed school in Pickering will live long in the wane of a few problems - MostM the restless and mLellbus spirits and fled Ne towrship either after the Rebellion or iT, or during the serxeda and eighties when the wen was caning up. Those who remained were content W make the Seat of an agicultmal society. The Sunday Sehool Association important factor in drawing people together and tnext to tilePoliticians of the day, We clergy were probably tie a who provided m of Ne leadership. W. R. Wood in 1911 is credited with arganiarmi and sing the Township Carbonate] through to a successful conclu- sion. eople o[ Toronto were just beginning to discover Pickering as the century drew to its elate. A few families bad camped at Revenue on the Cowan place for a number of years. Generally rt was built up with wagon out to "last Ne Toronto ton aRosebank random and bring the weary ciry dwellers our to the eml commer aide. Soon same cottages appeared here and at Frenchmans Bay, and the summer invasion had begun. As time went an wringers built at St i, at Squires' and at Pickering Beach. The aWnmobile, when it had become popular, gradually drew warrants away from the day coaches of Inc Grand Trunk. But dices people bad not wine to stay. September saw them fleeing the country only to come back with the badss in the spring. But the Palter was Ming established so that when the Second World War introduced a makers shell filling plant into the township at Ajax, many of these co maters, and olners, winwrized their numbers and began saying for the whole twelve months . More cottagesa built north of Condition and at Resolution in the forties, the' at the: Guild, and at Pickering Beach, until in the tnidde or the century sub-0ivfders were Seoul- Golden Wedduiy M,'-& Air, Dawul We UmehA A ... R, .1847-1897 frernrvood SNmolbm' — John olele,baAe. i kpf,... Gas aloes, 1909, Mise Katie Fawkes ant! her MolM1n m their hater, Pickering Village. 349 Rrown(rzl0 GorCmv, laking North, West Ratio, 1961 349 Divers oD-dmre foam Frenchmmu Bay hying undenvo¢r gpee my the township tribal for cheap land with no restrictions, where they could make a quick dollar. Restrictions were tightened and areas of Wear Roug<, Liveesprol, and Bay Ridges cam, into being. This labor, at present is tire only reildendal a , o the worship which has s and water bacillus, insollNwhen the house, are built, "Posed roads. and 24 similar, secret, water more, underground wiring mr strut against and hydra polo immnea along the rem of each rat wt, that development of 1.085 lob which is to house 11,000 people in ane community In a ounce formol in the to nsltip. no population of Pickering Towoehip which began to drop abler 1860, roe slowly after the tum of the century. The first World War had little effect except upon those farcies who had �1 dW lormMdr, at Assumption nr, College, Windro,. men cmc and those who were ares ting with whoever war work's Dmwg the prevent century various means had been on, m nPlce the British army =its in Canada by Canadian defence fortes. Inkrest was aroused for a time Own the 1837 mbelli=, at Ne time of Ne Crimean War, aid when not American Civil War broke out, but early effort prominent a more gWeNary than active militia, At one time Pickering Township was responsible for the Stir Battalion of the York militia under Major (lams Col EAznerer Birrell, (Con. VII). An annual musme day wes hold. In 1855, for example, on 2811, lues, when Col. Barrel should have CauM Out, Cals ins Donald McKay, John Birnisher. John Legs, John Luued= and Paramount Player toemble their Own, me event was concerned by headquarters. It us =n- ese = many returns afterward, w that the whole pmceminge lacked incendw. A few Canadians went wast to Nc Met µohlli= and a Jew others to the '85 Ikebellioo. In the South African War, Canada was represented by a lager=mbee Nan ever before. But 1916 f=ad moa prople unaware of the maptimM of the az shat waa coming new them. However their response was wtl nor Canada which had begun the war with one division, e urged in 1919 with n corps of four division, Many Pickering .. n. .. a ♦Rv<p'n�,y 9'f,E 4rtyFe 5Q'a�d'f., YAN[:N9� 3ARSe DP 91L�:IST AftD TS',Itno IDTIITb OL'l ..,.o P< c(� \ taa ,�. �E .3fd,iP Vj 'k F .BmW4 N Ol ' wed 4" i ePj..... M 1 �fy 5 o' ,. eQf �1 o IFn oyw, aQ.nane {If - Tol//� ��!llt� �6: %/ ��l% �� NABHTEN6: e7 99orsJ mI .�,.,r .��, ya„ �<,Zrv, Ind Aa e"I'de j Z lousy dna'Wn Ind ,yh�e..r y«.,, ,ayp ,.�, m4 LIEUTENANT -COLONEL m r/ i / ✓mG,. V �' ��!!<>r7AIZId, c%.V .',I.. lu� ji,.,, rym,. 'a -Ae' V 14 n;w "'W'04Md'a yne e„ .' rlpo,» all f y� �,�aa, o y e n„t,4fry 1. ,z..a l in eA.4e�i r I/ .AEV. YJ4 ,qy?l. eoWnelrl Bn,,R lll' nine lflenm_ Defence Indmo-les Limited ¢Grit filling plant Ajax. 1968. men eveJ. Almon sill rcwmed, but some wore left in gross far from the telling green M the Township they had known.' Agricultural prices were faced, but prices of all kinds were going up rapidly and there wns not men si Srtnt as of profit s there Imal own during the Amm.n Cecil War. At the fam,moreand more munimwasa te beAg mmim! to tm mg, Visa hopposed a, the unit other irs nmndeMinisters, spreaders, unnamed now¢a takes and loaders were all from introdutomake it passible to work a nnm With las help. = we Amondix mr owns The wd=ri adon which brought Toronto out of the world Of commence and was We world of industry after 1910, tlfew off many young men who in a previous generation would have had to make a living off the family farm. But it was the Second World War which brought the big wave OF immigrants into the worship, and many of them were Cane. Boom from other chose and towns to Ontario, Cable and the Mar rimes and from Western Canada. The Ajax shell Illling plana employed thousands of workers and many of them moved into the area from all over Canada. When Newtended and the plant clued forms,forms,they remawed n behind SooAjax housed the vernmv of veterans from Toronto University, and some of them found bums in the Township. Finally, before becoming a sepm- nicipalav it was used as a distributing course fat immigrtnes from Forope 'and the British rales, and some of them remained ho, so That Piakcriag at mid no m y bad a ccsmopolimm lest ]ones sort, as it had never bed before and new problems of core totally mamtimtior ouch it was IN wit ipped to few. Aueelon Sales, Dugold Sumer, Concenhon f/1, 1960. CHAPTER XVI PICKERING TODAY Picketing he moved a long way from toi®rrow More It is still green and beautiful and as one stands on the rising and five miles back form the lake, a panorama of ftdds and woode, distant mokrmeks and the gleaming sparkling blue or Lake Ontario are spread out Mom his eya. Farming is still the major sous of wealth within the township. It has become therebW as notified] with Mat of -five, pioneers but spuciallmd to, MOnn Pasi , Murray Dmkeld and Without Wcammy grow soul grain for others to cost. Many have unity herds of prim stock like Harry Buyer or beef came like Wines White. Others specia&e 1a Iwupry as dour Hngh Michell and Hugh S{uiras with thousands of Inherent. There is a nowshrosom farm on Can. V, which mucks tons of the tasty asides to Toronto. Some people grow cemuy gimps of peas, co monoplane noplane which um handled by Van Cramps at Whitby. The orchardist is a Mg opera mitre with a of tines like the Rcd Wing or Rein orchards rand tdth a ontralligni re ainMm smmge Wheat like Nat of Oavc Lennox at Pickering OrchuMs, The humble normally occupies many acre of Wound and the more rent chlmn, Orations and RUNb, grow the hernias for jnm factors A numberof nurseries handling stations and roses have appear- ed such as Schraven's Pickering nursery and drive are marry acres of scrambles grown for writer. But for most farmers a mixture s still in noun, with milk b dip, valves to sell and perhaps some pig and a Own crap to round out the proposal Compuam, is not neglered as Joseph Tum was Dominion ploughing clnmplan and Donald passed P,wm,ml transition, In Trade, Fanning has almost dvappvarcd south of the same nonce and houses am ukhhg its plainIn nor an,,V,l tiara am hundred, al norm of 155 sln+ngnele, Out. on. n,1960. wasteland. water planar and sewage systems an under can - sWclim and sonny people from ell pans of Canada me finding Pickering a pleasant place to live. The organization of a Signal Area in are south west of Nc ownship has prommed the case of edunGon and brought a Supervising comment] and a Music Supervisor in In eager in m mtlinaung the education of public whoot children and d whopum a uniform standar. There are now ag(s) corgi: mhml chiltlren tending township schools. ONy two of the hundred war old schools are sfid he me and they have undergone "Ornmee reno- an Industry hos begun to rome back to Pickering, although the most evident farina, that of mining grovel, is the same kind of wriefive intl�a'aty that leaping was a final and twemy years agoand leaves Oren more devastation in its now, CoosotiM¢d 157 Gravel Co., Con. IV, is largest. and Miller Pavma, at whose site Ne Indian rm®Ins were found he 1957, is also a large Wool The industry employs at ken 150 men, tbrdoys and W. D. Smith nrsmaller rators. aThope e &me plant at Clmemont which toms out stimulate late supplies gives employmmt W aWut Iwemy Invest At Brougham, sash and frame factory employs another M1Af down. Tilling; Windows, making metal sash fomes, on Can. V, is a much larger operas . In the south of the township the Canadian OR for North American Van Lines is lwated on Highway 401. National Alumim m Products Co. Limhed is on Banister Road and Colnwal Homans Ltd., our newest plant, on the Baso LIM Road. Tltu in dmtry moved to Picketing after having Their Scarbore plantpar- rallydestroyed by fire. The Head Office Butldwg is also in Pickering now and the Company has 250 people employed in i¢ various operations across Cut Pliurs; continental snowless and souvenirs at area shop just cast of Sandy Beach road. In me villages and at comments the servilesalon has replaced the blacksmith shop and often tlms welding and implement repairs. Many of the stores which wuwuablishN in the Inst contrary e sill in the villages. Madilkisa at Albna but MCNahs store, MCGmN's, We drngm¢ and Coopers Honduras haw all been in ocarrier for many years. Clarks at Consumers. Gnhnms at Railcar, Van Nadeom at Whiamale, Domains at Green River, Murriehes at Cherrywwtl, Woods, Cooks and I,& n Dnnhron (SlcighNnlmor's Log Orkin his been tarn down), Matchless at the Brock Road Stical and Moll at Brack Cooa's, the Trading Post and Mrimma Frenchman; Bay are all family stores. Mr. lhah liquor, artd herpuled, Ra, Use Srpchro6 rano¢,, in Rorary Funnvul Alar, 1958. y k In Broagham besides Ne faradic Barney more is Mears Hard - won in the old Trespassers hall and across the sled k Motors fol 1. Dan Beer operates his Rural Bus Line from Brougham and immunity thousauds of schwl children each day and ban- dreds of Infamous in the summer. Shopping centms and self =ran stares made their appearance first in the township with Eerie Slmuse Market, at Ne East Rouge, Sim that dime a shopping rmtre bas developed semens Ne matl and another at the West Rouge. But even with these local bull- ides me" people go outside the township to shop. Ajax, which meed a bank prosperous farms into a shell filling plant during tlw Second World War, became an improve. event district and then a separate m nicipality in 1950. During the yet it was Pickaing's largest battery. Surrounded by nine mil" of fence and guarded by 240 goods it bad its own went wd Same plant antl produced 40 million shells in your and a half yams n town in 1955 and due W the facililia providetl, and the encouragement of drugs Evans it has grown rapidly. It has a Urge shoppwg area used by many township shappers, Pkkering Village, incorporated as a separate recall in 1953, has also grown during the past few years with the pe- n of water and me development of smsestuive house build has Charges Block is it, principal history. But its shops and stores re part of mussel life and McEacbole a part 0f most formalorriml Immung Township competitive in many ways with its adjoiNvg nidpalilies, Agreements regarding the fire services and schools and hospital services are working very satisfactorily and Nations a emellem. Pkkering Township has changed in many ways but its muni- apal institutions remain mooch No same as may wee whoa fest eatublidlcd Some refinements have save muted in towel years, Fiver wards have been established as follows: Ward 1 23,000 acres 2$00 people Ward 2 25,000 acres 1,983 people Ward 3 to," acres 2,600 people Ward 4 43,11(m aces 4,100 people Wath 5 45.000 acres 5,500 people There are 31 1 ninths where IBM voters can cast their bidders at municipal eleo(mns. South 01 Canession 111, Ne msexment is $12,000,000 while north 0f this line it is $6,000,00). With the rapid =pension of housing m the Freoclunav i Bay area Ne total figure will swn able Beyond $18,000,000. 159 (... O .l t. , 11, , 11,u[n.d.lJ.1111. Hmrdicapped Childrrn in Sim Valle), Park Paul, 1957. In the southern part of the township restrictions an residential sageness have two in effect Race 1955 and the requirements haw been raised so that there should L an more get-richyaick jerry-built housing in the township. ]toning b; laws are being drawn top for the whale southern area and are steady effi iu the West Rouge, Gun Rouge, Glendale, Bay Ridges and on almost all land south of Conwssion 111. Andres: wishln6 In subdivide or begin a residential or wm- mereial dewlopmem m re permission from the Township Plant Board which c ori with the Municipal Board of the 10 tl tllyJc • "I II'mbe� e! ....... [u. a It <-14 091 Prov of Ontario and tin Metropolitan Toronto Planning Board Many People have felt that No restriction on personal freedom whish this End of k®sWtion Andorra is unfair rod dixrman. story; but the results of unplanned and owtlperviud building and development as an Ml matve are nM ramisint to commonplace. The Council of Piercing Township haz many duties to per Iona. It is compored of a Serve — Mr. Shermm 5aµ who is paid an honorarium of $1,000 and $LOW for expenses. Edgar James is deputy-neve, Harvey S}mg, Milton 1, MmMay, Harry Boyer, gas, Deakin and CGQOM Layeoa are counselors. They reoerve $15 per meetlng plus mileage. The council appoints send, ms aliry, passes all and ImPrictimms, SWAS Im laws, prixsaccounts and deals with pefitions aid catupoadmin. To nthec council a Toumfhio Omit is employed who rewMs Onesmmu s of council meetings, turnove New minimums W wumtil, Paagendas, by-laws, m15 Out ic hatcri mils, volae' Uses and conducts elation. He reNshers Binh; issues marriage Arcane, and buriml permits. During World War IT he Acted as RaliooNg OBiac Dough PAta Ne Transit, Collector is required to sliest all taxes and keep a proar Account of all Township funds, prepare budgets, mbmit accounts to Coumil for authority to pay, arrange bank loom and sell debentures. M the amount of stream of Nsss determine the voting of Ne Township in selling debentures, it his job ha keep the arrears of lues to a mmimem, even if he Do W. N. Ta ... Oman. Charismata. RaaAvuk SNaol X[nMremien Clan. 1961 vse the BaiGR, at other means to collect. To nuke it Bader beNeeaepayers to keep their Wu up to tem, mxo am notes out in three imtalments. To unpaid taxes after due date 1% kenalry pear month is added during the comet year, with 3h% per month hoom a elect January Ist. 161 mhmr. D. R plastic, me Assessment Commissioner is responsible fm making all asmssmcals which hander at present about 9,000. He commences January 2nd, and completes his Roll by Qlaber lit, xay Out assessment course about September tooth, arm, which data saw rmepayer has the right to appeal his assessment to the "Court of Revisionwithin 14 data Otherwise the assessment stands and his mics are based on this amuse[ for the following year. If an nsessmom ie appealed Old the Court of ReAsion re- du¢s or increases the ax re , this figuwill mind unless appealled to me County Judge "thin ten may from date of holies. the last appeal is to the Omario Municipal Board The Aaumon carry a County Assessment Manual, which is used as a guide. This Manual sets the sgnaia met rates for all types of buildings based on replamment value Willi deductions for age and locadon; the land values arc bawd an train pmdumi m, use and Radial. The promote. T. 0. Jefferson, is in charge of au public utilities and building permits, plans, water and sewage services, and till drainage, and se s; he assid, witb subdivision plan Last year the esfm urd ealue of a building permits issued was aver $6.000.01 E Pnux is building insµ:cwr: The Read IHpanmml is operated by a Read Superintendent, lack Chapman, with a AaR of 21 men. He has 236 miles of mad as mmulam and vies to pave about five miles of used a year. The Township areas two grovel pits, has a flat of truck; tied main- mivers, and has six show plows for snow removal. They have a runty budget of about 5260,00i Ref d 4 � Mw /(mr llel/ CWIi /960 DASA lllumo-AcpOmmHi Twenty ymrs ago Nis Township aces poGad by one Van4ime n who steady uxd a Woods for transportation. Today we have nupto-date police odic at Dumbarton, mi by 13 po&emen and 3 once gad. They patrol the area smth of Ne Third Con- wasmir all polite can am radio equipped They agenda on a budget of about 885,00i Reg, Rnkst, the Chic[ is responsible to a Polars, Commission, composed of the ba,bi the County largo and COunry Magistrate. The mrn north of dm find Cant woban Line is policed by the Ontario Provincial Police from Whitby. The Towmhtp has a by -Lw E,,,,,,, nt Department un„i Ontario Anmresr Softball Axo2n Champlms Paunchiness Bay, Pee Wees. 1960. H. Ashtoo. A. Goe beads the Welfare Department, and there is a Dog Control DeparMmt, The letter Department is quite valve in keeping the canine population under control. The Target is divided into ax Fre Areas, operated by vol unity themeq wird a fall dmu Chief, Don Linde, and Deputy Chief. All areas Love good modern emotional Om of the most active BOards is the Planning Board, cum posed of seven memMrs, plus Mo from Council, with a Secretary, H. Pearce, N the Municipal Olfm. This Board prepares, with the ministers, of a Planning Consultant, inning by -Lon untl land use 166 Arm law MaPAermn, Deputy Recall, 1059. maps, which ILuits xrtaw lands to mono uses. The Secrnary of De Board deals with and ndnses applicants what lead can be used for umbos purooxa. Education is the most costly xrvice given, as the following figura allow for frAool Anne No 2 leduccadoet 60 Cent, n the tax dollar County of Ontario 12 Cans on not tax dollar Felice 9 Cents con the lax dollar Township Roads 23;4 Cwts on the tax della, Gardens 6 Cents on the per dollar Township General 31A Cars on the to dollar Fire 3 Cern on the tax dollar Health I Cent on the tax dollar too These are now 3,900 public tthool children in IM Township and in 1960 public school Initiation was b512.1O4.46, which vepre- n S135.00 average rest per child. There are also 628 high school students in she Towaship, and high school taxation in 1960 was $200,456.12, which represents $295.00 par queen The actual act cost par high school puWl is $362:00 and is as - counted for by using present school popWeGon and lass gross's It is also likely that public school costs per child for 1961 ws. ill be $150.00. Alumina them is on, fork, a, Inch schwl slid per fuoNp mW We"cals, yearly conof one child is $16200, which rtpm Altona Uorfori Sundal School—aqesr m!(rkednS w.,mhly./9sa- PIOXMns -Oid Boys m Cememrinl, 19/1, rents 6090 of tire, Nen any he= owner whose news are less than $300.00 is not paving his may. The Assistant start wooden; on lmuary tad, and people mov- norin after he assessment is made are unknown W the municipal alhce unless they advise this office , The Clock posts Ne Voters' List more up from Ne nxesview records in October. These lists rc Fell in lilt Post offices and it is Ne duty of vown to make re Nair names are on the list within I< days of footing. No aliens have the right to vote. The opening of 80 reams north and war of Grccnwaad by the Mems, Comer aeon Atrocity is bringing many people to the Township for weeoends and tbuwas Ne musecian m open in Brougham. There um also several forestall, operated parks with foals aM thirst golf courses. The churches in picketing Township am sWi canes of social and religious life although pedmpr they have felt the eompanitem of the Sunday emmge fever which M1v stand many a city dweller. Other columnar organizations haw sprung no in recant years to suppinnem the work which has been carried on for many years by such groups ns the Women's Institutes, without whose InMrs this book would not haw been passible. The Red Crass Society has been m imlizW in recent years. a Society for Railroad Children has built a wheat or Arye. The emission Association has fmrered immune and athletic proleers. The Lions, the Banes, and the Kiwanians all have thriving survice clubs in the township which spend, wgnheq newly LLD., X.C., O Litt, HLP. Nanonnl Aluminum Puniness. S100,00U per your on Charitable and welfare projects. Harsh - capped children are helped on Neir way to bemmivg healthy happy cilium. Pickering is stirring as it has not done fora hundred years. 1t is of the Pickering of old but a township on the edge of a new sensors in flying. Railways and highways have sliced up the land and propose to do ea again, but the spirit of the people, old handles and naw, hom been azooxtl or never before to make Ne worship the kind of place they wish to live to Tbcm arc still many problems to salve. The pull of mMsn palimn Toronto and its domination of Ne cutlasses half of Chmaic is very real and most be recoymized Fifty years ago the Pickering Ieteses t was a popular root and a number of Toronto pr ork, bad summer collages here. Today there is another move - n from We city, some haw dome out to homes which are not only word aspromise cottages but for w workends to Unfortunately thistrpc of rcsidmt often name We township and Snlwbltan6 as much she same way as Pero treated Ne houssr, as int interesting but unimportant pan of the local rwwc y. Many of the solid old houses whhh were built in the part one fillies and sixties of the last century have also been bought by Tamm, people who ham conduct them to than former glory and mnde dhem into mmeviers modern homes. But the problem of living in on and morning a living twenty miles away in crasher municipally is am whch must plague every commuter. The difficulty of owning an concessions and a sense of respon- Abiity for she place where they Eve has always teen present far Comedians. And perhaps it is oven more difficult to far abortion for a townsNp than it is for a village or a town. A township is an selected ler local municipal government and its boundaries area often laid dawn wbhaat particular regard to the obvious facts of geography. Pickering bas a natural main= bauodary, Lake Lot 19. Conresalmi VI — 1948 Ontario and stretches northward to the watershed. but it and west boundaries have little significance except for admin istral purposes. It las always had her problem of a gear neighbor. As port of York County it had to labour under the de - thermal of having the county lawn with its registry offices and courts separated by twenty five miles of bush from the thirown farmers who were willing the land To -day the same all gown to marry limn payments, towers over the township. The &at settlers on the lakefmot seemel closer b Aachel New York than to Ihc'vcare caunty lawn, and it w ucb all to trawl in a boat hesthe lake than to waR through the woods to York. Dead so far from York vow a serious handi- cap a hundred and fifty years age, but as the will century reached it, halfway mink and the citiernx of the township begun to cause wbar solid be dopa at home this disodvaiage w slowly w e- At that amu thorn w ron8 a of staff- sufficiency But ma Iv the economro progressed i and social he of t Irony. mm as to pull away ra rapidly in am x nsion of the lnst fa toed a pull away rapmry in tpo icy of an re tMir the readiness, rand :hops. mon ties in a roto this Toronto or depwas engineered ere neighbor ivg ea m favour of Tarawa w mgind M br men likeother George men And Was Allan, true to a and Munn, wa otter city men. And this is kermillytine pr s degeritee. Butthisis of the whole answer as on manufa early prosperity was dem on uploiuve industries and on manufactures for which the dermad 172 has now award. Newetlheless, it has always been difficult Fr mardistrain anything but an agricultural community in me face of the ovetwM.lming pull of Toronto's indusWal mouth. Whether Ibis will continue to be Ne ease demands upon a umber of faction. No one can change the geographic fact of narrow, No one now looks to union with the United Seats as a way of remains the dan ination of the big city. But Pickering Township need not be a more dormitory suburb where people who can M afford to da m Bve the most apmsive kind of Ne, separated from their place of employment by twenty miles of residand paying For evemodem municipal out of n ery, xntial assessment instead of dm industrial assessment which s needed. The thief problem appears to be in the way we look at things. Qrtafnly township dwellers Amid take awry advantage of brv� e of the worMs greatest does aaeat grass roiatrotation.nat they should also trust that mumofthe skills and abilities which have brought the city in its present stage of growth are those whkh are 1Mh own. On, fie wale had faith in God W guide him thongs the willemees; but he also had faith in him- self that he would be able to meet the challenge of pionxr life. perhaps tM narrow obstacle to the sound promess of any town- ship Iqs in the lack of elf-crnOtlenee and commonly contains - ,on among ontai us- mong he people. To realize Flat together they can meet the Wlloch, of the future is the beginning of a new has. "Ono rh,pW,d has mhwn us on, Slowly, unmasingly, always toward our goals, But we are far two much prowsupied By the neat blade of grass To look inward. It is as though the fortlsman has direct us O'er No lush and grass, plain Cam to the Foot of a high mountain Bat ue Free became tut recrammm To ageing these undulations with only another To fallow Ile first, that eve look only as Far As the hxls of the sheep in from. A guhde, a signpost is round To point tie way: Ave each up the NII And see the shining gosh our purpose. Germany it the memory soca not did 1 sem lost without being w Until mtley."' \VPS Tal 1959. 171 Appendix i A PART OF THE JOURNAL OF TIMOTHY ROGER.S. 1756-1827- I was bore In the propene of Carmine, Notlh Amara In the Witn of Lime and my father's oe as Timothy Rogers. My h was on the 22 day of the fifth month in the year of our Lord 1]56. As my fortune was to M put out 1 Ilvd among other pupil till 1 was about six years aid and as they told mel was yoused vary hard than one of my inalwta hunts John Huntby by name mood about 150 mi6 in, the Hine Fashion in the gmxmment of Now York =it as he came down Verne I was put o John Tube lusi that 111.11 abnvH came mid talk oa f One and took me mr, to the Nine Fondues where he had began a law far But being poor and having a grate land, Put me out a spell an e bapbs mtoastor whdlive r I d a Ae Ail m than no Mir.. Then took mehom a spell. Then wheal w,,Vabout ten Mrs; old he put Inc out by one James GriRen in read place where I wags well yourd aid was about fl ken or sixteen then Mingpraswaided to go from him 1 went away and thrughk m larm. A triad but muni 1 returned to said GriRen agar The a m came n the barely of my unktl and he and two of M1§ dshun faaugMsa died with it thatatioutem the time that 1 w¢s filarand If yours ohL M1cuiN g. my mother dve tletl and a 6o a Marnetl a gut me laming. My roarnt neuro mem nmol 6 n Mistris nd in about Wce Vela I went t m ss 6 spull ander Int and be51n m rcdc by that a. 1 went I a nine scout aI hl to Orn m rite, and d slam by that nM whet base od souls, 1 my b ade rite sod to the Aginhard though t hwe as gangde good my mind doorand Norman an I eM1e InN that he created n tlesiar in mem drive a, final the J never got much at Isaw n my day many that, tzn RmI the cher m lama that I had and did not gin M1ull w mueh ur 1 did though I hope an ehndofn will try to lam. I dealt drat all paten of Cambodia will try W hove they childorn hurin6 I em re ber when I was roans I o6n round @e vimtlon o1 Gad on my war and I proud if it Ends he his will that I mite be one of his servants if it was only the baste of they that shuttle be thought fit I, enter to the kingdom of his ren (ems CmI My master was not a strips man though cold it very anent man and of a moth life and conversance. As I grew to riper age youthful not and Ne debts of this lire begw to draw me away and eMut this time wart between pngland and Amurmn the Unitad Stats broke out and all though at hat I found a spirit of wait on my mind yet as the I mtl brooks in in my sold at tims I found in, tintle thoughts under a was a the gooier dearudion of ovr on the with and yet I would not am why a man mite net stand in his one defens and I htl found that the towns of God o ader the old continuum did fight when Gal did command them. Then I found that Christ and his dempeb did not go to war bot Christ bar the ,of or men and the pane of doth for hh Inareau and as a Iamb slay, room the fooMimens of Elie wotld he we, marble, Neverthe las 1 found a grain e4ogel in my mind tied m this time in the nineteenth year of my nip and year or our LON 1]]6 antl ] day of me first month I madvad to Sarah War the daughter of Ohadiah Wife who was habitis in [heir prinaobills. The war spud mind the shwrs of Amamca sum towns win buret sent probers blocked up. The wmmon Nepal was mind w I divides whether they shoed AW for King or Congrcs but the LOM aeon sent his shount oil my and and war me to think why he should wan men to be created an yeas let Item kip one moref it such a rate each I found to be Ihfu their one parlutiam and by the Vint of the waked that cost men to foal which I believed Christ name b redeom men room, as his Life and doctrine waw of a lateral loving army and he caught her di,pds to low one pother and to low their 'Roma telling them ataping time that it big kingdom s of ams world Ns Economy would fight and he charged them to bait reviling and an fair from filing was his commands that if they was node on for choke they was to turn the carr and mmmanded Item to do good for evil and as they would have men to do to tlpm [hey should do to all men. There- fore, I wnkludead all wars was wikW and the welfare milt when a hard it was for Ne ems of the peril and as I was not brought up in any profession of rcligon 1 begin m Ninke 'me aceluna ie assom coq Error uunnuamn has hen gaged What way or among what pepil l mW same God [n an atteptrod magnor Now 1 begin to yous the plane*scripmr language which rose! pored to call m a quaker, Though my aquanlws with that mal eraa mall very syet ac 1 continued in language that 1 afrom found caoppersenity, of viceints name of We saes, or Nae cold uses ... ... The meeting ended quiet and well, Planes he to God. File 23 we JohnSt. Ions Funded about 1 in Nc enhancement found our trend w Daws with the horses and parted with the trend that had ,mankind us from the grand isle so far in a have, safe. We %set 20 mile tonno on St, Laments: River, found about 410 families and n Roman Catholic meeting house sees... Found a brig cold rbc Four Ranchers from Loamen board with eight doweled bodwls of season far Halifax match about 11, mils from Halmax in Non -show conceded by Cap Geoff Sarmon. facially and I went nn bard and sent our horses bone by John Davis. 'titer IS day wet parted fling on bard for w go about real, hundred mils be waroq about 20 days passig by motor, My some nin being vary We ahem 2 weeks and loving vl :forma of wind and rare and fog saving near S. Johns land than the get of Canna by the iland of Cape Britain and heated ati gs on 5 days and 1 Face two eery automatic dreams that gas,n: as of not in :my theory m Far:. 1 had many bTahiof, cry, for my wife and condom in my spirit as also for my one sok. On the 17 day of the 7 me, 1795 we had a pace SOFT tome on hors We Sat to Danhmoath among our because put up at Seth Cabman. We had a member of matings being hily favoured in tesomforly and came atmst No bay of Foody from Digby to the say of S1. Jons in the mouth of S. Ions ri n the Bay of Tandy. They say ties tide uses from 30 feet to 70 feet high that comes OF a From of wind the bay as be very mQ. At St. Johns wow we landed on the SN day of the all, month, 1795. On the 191h we Went former by trends M1elp to no Daved Unix on ( mpaWlm in the bay of Quady hyo Sa. Credit river. He Two super loging for nought.To 15 day sea gat to the provers of Maine. ..... Nate: seseml pages of sermnm omitted here. As Was waiting an the Lord their was a very pNusant furling 176 became zelus Wshow my intent to do right and it import my mind so strung that I patch "It Owes as if Were will be a live ming and I can get land where septi may semi an both sides and a new moray will soon be like an old pias in a newtabor- bood;-all he moped Wlking as I had been led to say that which proved weakness; W hire for so it was. And after u long novel 1 gotthem. AUNs gave out More I gm half way and I wed 1111,11 plazas and as L got v days jomy in the wltu ernes, ny NW_ O_ Lake Istruck along maybe 20 miles from any same More, for w Ihave often done. As 1 gat up before sun rise u very strong mmhun took hold of my mind he go back W my mail, bot 1 sat and it wanted to leave me, But I thought 1 sea willing to go bac or boot or my way if I must — the moshnn war from the Ing but now long n0 mot event on vers fear urger an the wddoemon as me as I could tell by my watch and small wgpm clean[ 5 or six mils and I went fast, the drunk stook me ogee and I went mediately back to a trend and old aoww" of mine to Yh Day whcir I Icft my heir :md dun 1t armtl as if I must go to York in this proven. And by a gmW deal of hard travil got to York w this proven, said diva went 30 or 40 mile Mc, and following my eonmrn mend way to apply to GarnetGiminl Hanson' and John Elsby, 0wfe pees became my trend and all the Ind was easy by a mmpmy bdom me. I got bac and got a great for forty (urns of 200 owes each by minding the filings of the Omtl Spirit an my haft weir naw their is a monthly meting and a half ycrs cling and 5 wake day mamgs includ'm wheh I now Gv,u and the Imd wag so wonderful to begin a meting of fmndg at this place for I met We Surveyor — that bad use the line when 1 agent out going and after I bad conartmed W bring on fatty females about SOD mita of land, l went on to Ls ke Pry and found o preprimi maganys one at Pcons and o at Blue Rik that made age month meting under the gall Of the wily matins at Pheledelphy. Ago whll I wag gen N a day or tow our fraud Samoa] Ltmdy (Samuel Load) come from Peovl and took joining the lend I had egged for, and took from Sevamment a great fur 20 !anodes n e jo]ning after u long bogus jomy, and laying many nights ,low in the wilderness I saw Samuel in my more to York and Ismue Philips that now is an eldor moved into York from Ponsalva monthly soting, and as the hotel maw would be hunts about this began and as all Of us is about 25O Or SOD mils apart now fMWs wait scatcrd [ince bandied mils. Of Governor Omeet better. Joint of late isolated Urdu audience time RmnWy Rngrt wu •, not beg at Ne time a actual The Negotiate, show, emwtorm Hero he eat a fees W, Ikn Duey sear ell Downs. badness I may ey the Lord ad ashamedly help tresxd be his nmic So I found Rufus and mmmd and got had after about 3 orally ::nd an Oe 15 day of da rukam month 1801 1 pae1W halosand em the 191 started sewn stays and all my grade and aeir s ,at My wil'a Sunt had a son just Mror I stared Nat I Hurd altar the class! made John Elmsley liogecu, and we had a grate mole and many tryels but got on the ground about be his of she 5 aboard, 1801 . _ _ .. . But in 1807 1 Wd a mit plane in N;owin and about this time IoM birth from Ponape, , recommended m Md in and took much led, in tm0 nd Won atter Jacob Bin a lm under on, c s to Jong St from Vermont, .Intl then aha crone became a erred trading or rattler 1 can my but trail as 1 do nth belong thereto, her I have always maid it my rale if 1 thought any or our members did a mis w as to make me may to me and tell them and when I thought Minnaor or elder or overseur ised it I ge and tell them so that opens a dor and they toll: with me Reely and it is well non I have M1ad a grace gift tram the ION to seal newu votnry. r have mld eight now farms of pin:nshens laid out one town when I want first I worst themy mile in the wmemea rad now there k a town on enter our cold Vargunus that is incorporated as a any rad within lour dark cold Femssbm rr quotas. This town 15com lays on aboot the seater of Iske Ontario chair emrys a fine carne wild Doc Crik. Thu Is a fine science arm I bill my :nil, m m ionic cold corn 3 mils from Me Lakc Sham and Ind at my mil dao a fine fisheq is is. Our semen commonly ves Wor well dressed about 7 or 8 pounds add some 15 ar 20 pounds. We hard a grant wryery a fish in this Inks which is 300 units montes — for grace Ailing and the grate waars Mat make the river Se larem runs Me My lake and Nygera Fels at the hed and the carie below Cargo of the outlet and Montreal our fine see pan. Smith has give history of Uper Canada and sound avelors Oscar Var and old pardaer Anthony, Mat I refer Mose o Star w a limber, accounm but 1 only rito to was my mind. This plan athough very new is about the Semen of trends io Otter Canada beleve in time will pmduae a yetly mmmg within ten mile of this spot whale I live on Darns Crik and on the 9 day of Me 10 month 1808 John Brown fou adding Barks county — JMn Shumaker in Shumakers town, Abwgan mnmg both m Pensulvana. Hannah Father of Phcladelphy and Iiebnmr Archer of Burlington the retry meting for lends for Peuealvema and New Jarsa to be held as PNladelphy and from the yetly meting for Ircnds held at N. York. Ann Mainly of New York City Anna 179 Ment of Nine. Pull and Rubin Haight of NinpnNnie wall aril IXhets for pili( mod company. These 1 w muidombil with and a blcssetl Shut it was to us in Vies, Carl oM in my last handras of our mo ycrw useful I saw them all and mostly at then one hems and it was in the pour of tmN that was b he held at Westlake meting on forth Sty following NC Inst fret day n the lust mouth at Yong Sume o0 4 day following the last firs day In the tdghN month select meting. At my return f fond a Suite cloth on Yung Stmte and had ban Joel on my beloved fronds family. I mean Jacob ren and mine for 1 had had foneen eNldmoa, 9 sons and Six dattors, my two oldest sons that was marred dont helonP a one homes bre a' utold on Yong Strom, five dmlms tont was muted, an dyed —2 along John eighteen and John goal abnuo nine yers Old and also the man he was named on the aaunpt of I heir is Md My wif icily giv us Mmes — my famnly almost half goo I had ben biWwg gk mJ, sawmill and $card to, then al and from the first woke t came bene I always wt down to wait on the lord in my on house an Rist days and John Haight that marred Marsh Rogers lea far many years Let Nit xogn bg 11, awg rete heel eon Lot 13, Con, I, wadi at U,Rpu en kd ehawh wil11, l in the rule matni, new We .mouth can.mina atNarrow Park ellbud ,ft, His mills .1m 11 In, mill 'it,enr, a re o 1956, 11" ill Us, 401 e al me CN It b xis,, beam touch ooh in his mind although he had Mn very bad and had ben vary deirsakal in his prineipbck I limieva mine opatlonys I had with him was m Sued efwr he cargo and set Awn with os me tires and my wJ ap along in a smanee way and was ablock to my going o my only amongst fronds, but said if I would boss a good halls or to her Short 1 mire go n' n 1810 and l l I got It luntor so I thought to a move. In a short line had a bare and nsidorabil of charting and the 3 day Of the 1 month 1812 my mm Samh read 1 signed to pro to York with me to Sit sem tangs she wanted in said hour lend me we rode this 24 nd6 she wkW plexnt and told but wishes and the nese day utcnded to tell and by and Ntm we had ben Elect awkle mat 6 or y mils up Yong St. to Wheat Metal for his wife was hue sedation and your us. Well bye my wife was taken party and complained of chits then an ague and paw between but brest and oda THE old realion levery kind as man Italy Nen caner and I ren went to York d ones Doctor Aspanwall. hoeryrhing was don that man cold an — we left fare cltildarom at hem. Asa, Wing, Stephen and my nine only dare, Matilda, it being vary cold 1 was very much for in go i,trading on M1e,, she limited aloud to the laid and oRon expmsd mm religus sayings that she had Rest when yang hour elle had fond tmuds antl wait not wiling a be mmovee and on LS the b day of but shares and the 13 day of the 1 month about 8 Wal l in Ne evening she departed this life While I was lay down a short time, but 1 laid SAM say Mrs. Rome is dying 1 marm and mantle hast bat laerer I got to on she was depend this life. And 1 sent to my mtold Mildom at the fatcof easy of Yong BemL They came to bur buret that was on the 17 Any of area firs month at my one house in Piwran with my three childorn, 8umh. John and John Blmsiq Bull And now f was tart to move in my new Jesus with four chill two oldest sons wind at Your Sttet and Timothy dimand and Stan W the stats. Qo you think long cars A& my trobel or pen right my sheaf. 1 xm uPowmd with other to go W our yerly meting m New York, and I mat setating my oumd nfoirs and the lord maid way and I sold my mills and fifty users of land and paid all my hares that 1 no of except a marriage on my laud and paid part of that and kit money do from Rolxd and Demand Penrose and Timothy Millan road to pay it and Asa Raffir s my law man -in- law took a pour 14 Antony to mlaU said At and ac no the said morgaige, and Comely BlOmm being apuimed to go oils to me to go to Jared. and Govnar Sher to shit lib" and I did so as year as hollers: Hedqunress. York 6th, match 1813 — permit Be ondemamed reasons of the society of Qaken to Past ova from MRB,tO to the UnitedSNht s, vs opens they hove ben apaimcL¢t to stood their fairly meeting of their slaty in the city of New York — Philip Darlic Jonathan Bowman, Crmtas Dan", Timothy Aogms. By ctmmand of His Honor Major Gineril dicaRq Nadhoo C oMn, Cal. To Can Pearson P.A. D.C. for Officer Comm&. Kingston. I man from a man of Any agoanuns on Yon, arm[ (vis) Them air to mrtafy, that I lmve mew Ne Iffil hewer Timothy Points one of the the of repel called Quakers that smdlled on Yong st and one of beds of that sosiety, Be the away of Yorks sans the ym 18M, and ms be bas been my ny nabm most of the rime 1 have "own filo at be a very !humor inductors Anna and the best man for selling a new cormy Nat I was ever aquaw¢d with and he hath lin my coWaomabel to all of our lows And regulations as u hoed subject of out Lod the mash. But he had Ne miafortin to Imo his old compaoan a wonky wife by def An the minds of Jamwnry 1812 and now is desire to travel to visit his trends. Yong st Febfmry 19 day 1813 wlam Gramm hums and (Atmel of Meluha 181 I also gm from fronts to alio met 1 was clear of m rata; agagonents as indoor. Timothy Rogers being anointed to alwd use why meting at New York allowed that he had a dealt or prospect of visiting can of his relations in the Stats. That may sho tly that he is a member with as and chair of marsig imeagx- ments es fur as tabs. Shad is antl by order of Yong Stood Moathly meeting held by alommeut the 25 dayof2 month 1913 by Thomas Limed Clark, and also frau( our town clock. To hone it may instant: This isormty that d have ben emotional with Timothy Rogers forxwril years part and I mw Lim w be a m'an of vemsaly and property that consist of air five thousand driver and cleftof dept. By dated Thomas Hubbard, at piroron this Town clock for dre lowed of threaten 26 day 6f March, 18 13. Hoed desvik, County of York, and protracts of Uper Creole. 1 put has sun Ata to mine enh of 290 aeon and a wnsiderabel of improvement about 16 or 20 mils to Yong Street. Stephen is to r old freers Tommy and Sarzh Hilbon ny handle to his mother. Wing to my yang trends John A. Hall mat five up heir to help take carr of this six hooded tors and so holm. My damor Metalda at Hendry Nou las and I clo0N them all exslmay wen for about two years. The was maks me jenny lak main — but my libel dependans it in the lord having now brat foromA a short account of things with my one hand I may say Brat in a few months in the year, 1809 departed of my firmness by sikness about thirty an and ny Ymbe: Some: had comidembil rmben In other places On this date and tut foal a brain meth has gm thin this Uper Cited, First it was cold fie tyros hove, but hourly we have had the n¢sda by which sem has departed ibis life, but MMtly it has ben such in onemnon awarded that it ms to bright did skill at she wisest and best forimm;s. operates Brown ny heir and wile ie momrto. This d day of the 4th mon lb 1913. I eaenat no elan ton. Tire door, nu i.r dAwnflowed until the>,u 1827 just before Omst Rww, din He the 7 day of the 2 mo 18271 set very sun, my wife and 5 random by me o00o ds pureed Jonathan red 7 Officer in the Just 6f tau. 1 seemed to feel a plcunt fiew of devinc toy that 1 below to be the but of Had by his am Jesus Christ Then it wan and is that in r, mn 1n my mind to as to my yeagW sons wine met has and Uaved Rogan flint was for the kind minx of Dnved Rogers oe. He is moved and now add TimmM1y to signify my son — that from This time bis and is dived Timothy Began and auto his name is role maven T. Bogen duty ay be understand Doves Rogers ma of Timothy Rogers So that Drivers name and his anthers is remembered. Appendix if THE JOURNAL OF WING ROGERS The following pager art an exact copy of the originals — words, spelling, punct , etc. The original book at this data (dao. Jo, 1961) Is in the pee- xsn of Mervyn End, R.R. 6, Galt, Or, tatorvyn Patfl, is fire son of the late Hannah Saunders Rogers (and 1. G- hear daughter or ETho Rogers (and gusaMgh Cmess) son of Win Rogers (mW — Hughes) son of Timothy Rogers (and Anna Barred). this is my bray Arms al n wness. m leave Aelued me. Wing Rogers Borlyand pan this the lith day W the &h.momh, 1866, & I am now to my 68th wer of my pllgmmage,h bring a long time eince I have had it ora my mind In write dorm some of me baptisms & vials, that the Lod,00t of his lander mercies, hh bmught me through;; ryaim ya his holy n ye Gall mmy tonal ortspreg,rising gercm n, & ye that fear the mrrhat look town these lines when tl am dead & gone, & may we all meet an Heaven above, where all is Iowan) see Ns four & sort his fro rs foxror & Lear Amen, is also 1 haw waste a for beautiful pixes,that I have found in different oulhs,xlecred OIL of 90M papertracrs,& star ¢c. In these, 1 have taken gnat &light & would with my dying bremlt recommend b both young and old,as also to all Lead baok;whieh point We way to Zion, for hmks have a Sam onflumcgon the mind to direct us to the way of the saint, verlaming Inane the way th lamentation & was. But I study bmnty;althmgh I want to BE b drew OF federally seeder a little shim my dear Pazonts, and firsts will strong of my door factor his nn as Timothy Romor,, and he was born in the Aamy of Concomitant the stack & des¢odmts of the martyr Min Rogers,mivister of the gmpel,who was burnt at the amw0.gmilhneW, Loodamin Us Queen Marys reign when wife followed him to the smkeµi[h small cmldwok me at her brest,& my Island father reforms us Iha his Children are mo tenth gcnentiot from that statute matlygo! Our dear Land and sa m Jesus Christ who ampmi over death hell & the plateau We flames, Holadinalt,prain yeJn Lord.01i my wu1A I want to meet all Of you, that now doth lin,but awn will be numMM with the mi that has gone tomarein the bapy Cmoean land I hope, where them will to all for you & rest for me, & rest For tire goad soldieglM1at hath Intl his amour by,& when I medim e and speak of these preshus things my poor soul Arms to be With Bunyons on lite eliminate mountain with the shepherds where the nyee is pare & the birds am ever singing, & all Creation pain the high & lofty one who inlmhim eternity, & where all the peoples minds & mulsym engaged.bolh by night & by day,lo reach that Imply home, & converring about their ®joyme is when they atlas ate at that delightful el'unm0n due other Mile of Jourdifi Lite Motor Oclds of FdegWhere the rec of life is ever blwndng'ITere will be ren for you. On ye faithful weary plgrims,&them two the shepherds had telescolin & Nose that had gad eyes (m nn¢h Jaitlq,rould ase the Celestial City wbme builder & maker is God,dom July round & bngtl to the, there their moisture were,& Nem molt beats won lh wammicr do GMs saints arty wonder at it,for 1 read [a of o of a arearl nnyMail or mnL Nat bad asight of that glomus placre Na[ anm ted leave bob n nt for all of earthsntohwns full of iuwalr, of proofing gold @ siwq& molester eunyon lolls of the suram ming down from Ne Ulenlal CitgwF¢M1 bas built on very high mountain, with rural baps and all kind, of instmmeNa OF msn theirtheirbanda,pl.alm me most melodies elimination mounts ant hembm Conlon mem no to the royal Lhy,&ahers Iho gates were opened & ha M1oms ul of the bells ting in that great City,& all of the inhabitants whnu[ welcome weary prborm M1e wished to be Num,but t sin¢ Andy impssiatC.unless W1 unly lova that tmhle Polls Followed, OMs Only Mgouen son luaus CTrin, mommy to be plain, lorewr & ever mote, J, keep he, strums & mdman,cw ,n a,, harts & printed in onr 0 .nu36ty is Zeohuiub & ¢Iixubed. who walked n all of the. Commandments of the Laid. blameless. Oh when I think of then aretgiuems wmOf Joy which John Burns leans, with owns well As ,nany mom,mmt moll madids under the semilimde of dreamy& visions admired by all denominations then I haw to probe the Lord,for that wood of trutbleft os he Holy weioub 33 -Chad I<1M1.vcmc For GM speakeN once 184 yaw Iwim yet man permirveth it n a dream in of the night when deep Meep m falleth upon him in sh beaog upon his betl,namely, Me Intel are earths toy ro region, 1 an Irtir of Heaven may be, Parise ya the Lord Sib my longing panting soul& I sell[ sing in spirit & tmtbHallaluJah bight renown be to the Lord God & the Iamb femver as ever,Amen. Nmv I will tell meph friendly madep that my dem Father was an orphan Child, Md neither father or mother, both were dead & gone, & whilst but a young Child he was put out mongst haran a ewho used him vary bard and cruel& 1 have open haniter wooden however he lived through the abuse that he world tell inertia the tear, running down his aged aheekvbm ProvWamwlly some of this friends gat charge of him he brought him to Dutcher county in the there of Newyork, to live with an uncle where be teived gad Erni then he cautioned antlll he grew to mens a,& them. be was tied to Snrab Witurny dear eNxeier- nee Mahvihat batbeen grew no doubt to Labeled Labl Cly. Wnt 52 warxoh yam,& there r holes W meet Bar with wogs of the inseminate prum is Hallatim s as high rensuatforever to M with our Lord W we his have th that dear mothee She Ings way Imus home to mverve, the awfull stake of death, which she Met widtin be aircraft cumposs and most of icer retiree.. Love saying.Oh death where is thy aigpb grave where is thy victory; & directed where she Jmx to here her reforms laid all beside iter children in NekedrMalmer now Ler xray soul to Rest in Jesus Arms, Oh let us all arrive to meet there. And that dear tater and mother hW function king Gudtm,& one sill Wm and hart I will give their mairicandin, first birthpbadiah Regms Iames R., Hannah R., Mary R, Lyme R., Sarah R, Eiseman R., Timothy R., John R.Asa R., Matilda R., Wing R_, John Dismay R A Stephen R., & abwn mm yeme he(om my dear mothers dearhmy Parents burned seven children out of the fomteeo Is most of them were maned & had families, which .was R grant vial W them Mvbot Particularly so, with molhegl was young bar 1 can ember of seeing her meet the neighbour within, & mh5ing of bee troubles & Mat logs, with the tc ruming down Mr aged face If computing R to fah troublessbut she park the same diverse,the Tipbus fever when there was none If that in the land,& "at after tam,& I most shortly believe to that sw et IBM of east, forever to he with but dear Lord & master sec. Then after my mothers death my dear father maned the seek, d lune, W a very fine Chnsim woman, who made an cxehcm spGSMOder to mG& all of. Fathers Children, by his Each wife, & she was a grant comfort to him in his declining mars,hur name was Anna Harnedeof New 1,nayof a coast rtxµruble family,& she two has SUM, 1 bars, to the City of the New lewealam,where sickness pain sagging & inrmwe eau never me,Hallalujub,but my dear Father paimd away a few years before hen I Unto to M forever with his Lord& rest from bis toil, both outward &inwardfor he oft had to contend with Pon - eipalities ffi power, & spiritual wickednusin high Plnus;he oft 'spoke to the morarrieff in Zi sora the assemblies of the LondA slrengthned the weakknees & hands that hang down& it was his delight to ow IM prespm'ity of factorial ,raved to we her bother, rnlargcdA her stakes tlrergtM1ened,& bur come lenyhned. he traveled wane in baa mauefs sum.@ oft times prrclaimed the glad tidings of much joy at home at his o mummoto the Seloicice of many brnne,&e. & in the comphr iomte Savimns bacon, 1 hope he Math loured a redrawid"A my dear mother Ansa bore my Father rte Cbildretwhme namesme,; Jonuffon R.Ragq hRWilde eash R Austria ., John R.Oavid "R R., which n all made many Chddmn. Rat of my own dear mothers children themonly .0 , 4 ul tM aSmW family loaceas c. I havo cold mm my father & mother were malumd in ameba, arty& from thence they moved to Damby,on Ne waters of Lake Champlaigin a howling wildeiness&them he called ons the mane of the Lord,& a friends meeting in a few Unbosom gathered around him_ My father & mother Stam came in amongst friends by n4ued,mry dear rather was a man that drove much bminess,he built mills,ffi hem M built a Unaccounted land, kept ebrc,II iR Some pulses made Serge contract with Ge land pmrvimrs & Gov make wrlementA always m gather u the Lara&it was his great delight theme to Mat an Wort to me Gad Abraham Isaac & Jacot, is from thence he moved to Vergennes, where n rands o of the largest towns n the Shat of Vermmasi In that c entry my God gave me birth, in the year 1998,10th mo 25th day. My all moved here into the wildem ss,liat WW"Llont WAA 11 faPidlYA he Became weahhy, for the God Ina fall had blooded him in basket & in atnre,& hers also M erected an altar to the God of the wheel tart, MartorsYrophes & Aportles,whae in n few year; there was gathered o large meeting of vnlinmsfrr their holy Redeemer, cause, for all those lighwag , I ofdmes heard my dear tither ebwR blessd Mame the gnat giver, of all things both temporal & spiritual.1mllalujah,& now 1M Orphan boysonerming like Joseph in Egypsfohgot his Infers hnste,he hcame fall As plenty, with a wJe & Caledonia numerous !army& actual of the ,Meat of them m riedA be had rvanta & maid wervanu,& he might have said with Jacob, 01 came owt this Jourdan with my staff only bat thou Oh God.hash made of me two bands. Well my father said oat a rim posse:ion there & warned to Canada,weet five hundred milli rued on Yong str Omar Newmarkq where Ix mean made asummer wub the newly moved Governor & Chief lustice.for to make , settlement,& f offimes heard him say that be mixed here the first Gwetnm own took his seat, in Upper CanMa.in me year 1800. He made a bargain with the anomalies he bring in laity twelve, to vette this howling Miller verdict shudy it Was then a howling wildemesg,wMre n fmhml 0ndiamedords vier Ns garden cringes towns Cine; whereas gmammersboola colleges Aromatic good roads factories of all kinds both of wood iron tires gold & silver stone & marble; 1s cu ember when it waz a great Nanave Narrowly to hono printingo0ice,corm in little yorkss it read to be called.but Toronto now, & now I presume there are hundred of then in this Provmce,therc u actively a vilage but there will be two or those of them. Those brave leieress Iced to go to mill forty -fifty, and in some plass a hundred mJesafrer there mem a very few crowd, & in sow cases cut the used, make bridges or same across wake and SUCH111i indmd comber with thousands of diRtcultim.that the iMabimnu now are sommarm b; & now i am grwin to goes the reader little hint merecting our Mid beum, there were thousands of wote,t sato car foxes wildcatts or lyom,rvmns& other smaller animals me coverage [a mention The wales would collect into large companies ofti nw hom, & barkyeles & amerin, it far,& make several mange noises, yei old homers ren nv that mue wolf of] mond many different notes Dough to make the forest rig agi & make the san n tumble if he w exposed to their wilds. & had �,pm , whom, But to me persons that had safely ;rice to the log house their heating pleased then, nre4 — they debased to heat this mid musk,ptnbably as mouth as our vain youth delight mrwndeys to hear what they call the whool brass band Beside mese mon- sters ofthe fore n.whib mum the dred of winshcep &the dudd di bean was to be dreaded n xtmcy chance gother into large companies but they were Iwld & would of attack man, & they wc materialssmalmaterials & frequently Vanilla mW been roughlylmadled by them.& king killedAwy also destroy lire sheep & swine. & other eredums that the new settles knew not how 10 some. Also me deer.& mmmmas fuhrof many very, teacher kindowus much usedamood of what every fanner ca we n his own form for fed,& the esting of the table. Besfeee we had a hear rummy of foundation made aur 6r¢u ring with their owner reausi duck,& nese which were an excelent delta for a few years the nrshe;mat grew in mom furnssin a bwdrence,made mod] fnW for the cattle & Forsq wevem the said wlmmvpntil it could Mround by the whrolwns. In lhwa days titan were a meet manr,ren hmdreds and Nomunds of forgotten Nativen,who were harmless & agreeable, & they andcd with the whit people,in many ankles$ when a boy we were allways effil to see them come m our fathers house with Brothers formula treys ladles & fish, venison tlucks & geese, & abogan cremberrimA many more kinds of bevies, & furs & s0tts &i boo now they are fazt dwindling,& owing out& will in NI probability ionic furor day be entirely gone as the nations that are cargo. Welt after my father had lived W fulfill his ,anter with aspect t mrrkment,& had the sadsfacdon to se great improvementsn tlmse main tarp 'meeting interim, in the year 180 m -R — he again moored to Pckming whole he lived until death mmmod[ h®,as the sweet Not mils ,ss,On the other at& of Inu di the sweet India of adopt hope to Camteami the free of life isver btoommi There will be at for thoracic, to any roil any m hunger or room any in x m. But my deal torpor hval to a large mi informal around him Jai also in see rhe great not in Jin string that seta called the Nixlt reputation which took place in time pansplrour the year 1828 — & a very wmNll o t it w imined,it news] many pangs of on both 9des. Busmi dear father red a pmspect,0f a yearly meeting N Gorda,& be used to salt his CbilJrcq& his friend, ilea he thought it would be treated m PiQl,cis acearly 60 years baboon it sem granted to our Tbam Oummily ancetingennew held in Upper Gnadgtmmely Warfare, Yeamoma,& Pelham, for ytr veal requests being made to the Newyork yconley meeting of Iriendesto which we belonged in those days,Ney oantd b us a scroll mce( pato he held at Pickering& the Nal meeting in Ise Mid out 60rrno.w the year 18V — & our term& am mw makes preparation for It, & a large hick minting hawse is mildmgon Net of my tethers old fmmpn We very grands hitt he gave to the exhortatory years Mfore his cbmthsor Ore am of toeing & a boost BrouM,praie ya the Cord,samth my gootsal- volian belmgr to car God! with Mary & Elisabeth, 8t Ink first cb. 66th cerse$ Mary sued, My soul doda magnify live Lord& my spirit haJa reryiced in God my saviour, &a,&r.'. Md when but a youW& up to mankind, & the early pan of my days, was caught hundreds and thousands of 8almogin Dummies Crai that an through my fa mos farm on the which M built amossull & gristmill,& also duty were sought in all the ericYS &teams an 0w hong side of Lke Ouhrio that waw large enough. But as me fishermen io meni the coup ry became dewed ug& mitdam[ bomb, which pmvomed them Wm sowing up to spent, lip besides all that nets & ss x, & the increase of navigation, o Nose0 ors a(where do or 80 years boorethen bywas theya wMtc man to hsenvJ —id to spa this is a ermon why they NIin;& also all kinds shrutl N spawn an the inning li the ordinaryre Imus whitefish sturgeon assurance into ffi & stten� many m kinds live: in Net is Ears run u matters Cr& suckersthe Fcontrivl ridle In plane treate Eo draw he o tof de & else men he Poor uhemex t e Nal area to Naw them re ofd rummaging, the hoot I like Nalivcx ofAMreginm,urtfuxt tlimivisldng for which And vow 1 propose the thea oh our eft ho a hon about my Nn uelf & . In the recovery Iy ra I left home on grant artems Cray my self & all the distance ta sary sme, hun Ile Ninepin nnSchool, Ne Stine,& about five Fathered milear or in Dennis�o'bas n unithen considered Sealy& be the the twentiethpuable of my ol in show rc a then considered to be the m average [ablerem remarks of v Nzrs probably yearably wourowld be [bink tie he boys number. of ¢Fellers probvFly swmld be night u men, the boys we taught & taken rote o Orb day & irily act men, &the eir6 by n win it d¢buys Orb hadentirelyalone by& all apartments, Nere was t Blustereretingmeeting wo & ca by,& all y i GNNen attendemended the heefingtwice n vmoSur every haltden day in the ¢met for to % riot ale Loa of dards, be many a refi & Glnily met for to order Ne LOM of limy & ninny n f the pass ssalw a it Nose render years, like the springing ke UP of the liras;tlld me Sham Na river of raver m makes be Children shout & sta ons. tall is Worry forever more. em, had anchor ounces cached,& cart myadebillionaire ing fathers & mwheg & 1 Fan vy furnace had through Abraham my pilbe mcoa to bless & pmisgNe God of Igo Embers Abmbam Lauc & jthe co m I over wns avimd to this goad sten they I took down all the comes of my dear fellow;& ahoolmmter they wart comin in & guwing out reedy ml of the ti irm Noo may see I M1ed a great&a many noes. But S have M1ed h them ] of dmw m marvel,& is all Of et rs Fave that a with Nem In a than I have, in nbistailke p hose cant makecop with on half of fare I ever connote teacher keepf wgIl of the deaths de oreaparts nfthe anmheq& teacher xe tlawtha s" if us ever pasts of the day that that of is tarty nm that wo ho m meelpioBr the day that we left eadt sed¢r at the sshoode ever fI my heathy prayers that we may mere. On tile of Li aide of Israeli m the sweet fields of you, hue the tae of LIIn is ¢vat 6loomlvgthem will M rem for You. And num as f was aboutto[cute rbc. sabout ty kind behind, that [ had made aryoainive enter ta was home W my Pull was kind evough 10 give mqm rah home b nip Itlendsk relative;& aequalman«sane following snmficate or recamal numely— This tiny inform the Mentis & mlmivea of me beater, Wing Rogers, who has +pent a year & a halt in the Eoartling School at Nmepatmma, that wln8t here be has been particularly tint fol to creative the regulations & rules of the school, kind & obliging in his dispmitiodby which he has gained the esteem not only of the enthral teacher, superintendents & body. Waterloo 7tantonm,39m— Igzo Andrew Cherokee) realEarth Height ) Reuben Haws — d'nperlvendent I fully approve of the nWvek drink In well deaeram it. James Cong cm,J, Late Teacher Well kind friend,ahm gelling the f Wve,& selling all arm meet normally with those new made Gi ust my beast Idled with structure [or having to leave them,never to meat again on this unhly build bid Nem adieu,& as 1 have mid all sea nd as if d was conscious of it,for my youthful[ Lean felt pangs that is not easy to theories. Mmemoughl I,tm we stairs never ahold eat again on the shone of time whilst the tears noxM down my thanks like miq& also every marks of leve on the part of those left behindf I also returned home to Canada, much like the groins cot to Ninepattners,only in the Feat of mmme ,which wm very foursome in Ne extrounwheo, f found my old friends & subcommittee, mostly well,bul a few bad gone the way of all the eartb,which used van serious inflections to pass over my troubled soul,the smolt hardship of mind A Imurle¢ the War Chang from Ming to mhml,& sowing lmttlintely into tell beyond my aluminum like to of record my road bark N of financed in the deep, but the Lord my pilot suffered no harm to befall media stuW beside me & suffered none of Nee Ihingobtainmharmqmeg,I still will praise Ilia holy time forever & mer_ Or lit ns remember he bads the blind ivv they rano net,& always for short sighted main goadR w [awas with me. & Ise me sins with the sweet poet — green catch against my mal mm m,And grey dem around an, be butler, Then I'll smile at saves m r%AmI face U frowning world. And now a year or mom bad passed as I began to think of eying mmuf for Jif a in this solemr. underal 1 greatly crowd to W satirical by Gods holy spirit,& to find a helpmeet that would gre with me not only through Ws call of tors but up to that probe City wMse builder & maker is GcxJf ing Irm well were that there is an eye that never slumbers nor slapsk he takes recognizance m all Art man Negri he can bless or he can blast all of aur fair pmapsp & receivers. Again 1 any that 1 humbly naked & craved as in the dust asha,Ihat the grant pilot would direct my little bad into the one hewn of rentor have cat two travel one mad unless they be ngmq& I thought that ourmel bliss n misery much departed o r choice n takingu1pe a ompanion w Noel with,Nmugh fifes chopmN same,& 1 still think We samean miller I might say more than that. I know a gond deal alrout it,& ham sun & heard imundamew of the sect captain or two being coequally yoked together; just Audi pulling for the hapy lad of et mal mi the other for the bitter Intermediate of wi M1ow many dear VATIRIM ham Near draged down to becoming & go coq& alm how many husbands by the wife, allhumit site being the owner must he* acted like Deli4 dict to Samson until she bad actin him,& whorl families lest by the influence of a wicked lather or a under indulgent mmhegin all things pertaining to the world. But lacking the true news that will purchase the greaten Nat they may anoint their with & ni lack Ne true gold that bath Bonn teed in Gods !amore which is W Iermalam,or tried on his altar chat is in Zion — on bow assay are content with half mens rts hke American & Salim his wife,& allow with & reality (In 12) w Gods holy sight the m ug s thdid, by indulging in s & falfirsh ch mspunished all be ain mnity;Mn thousands being down upon their head even in this world, the heavy stroke of Gods worthily not being obedient to that leacher 'Mt canner be manni into a corner& I can say with the swat psalmist,Once 1 was young bat saw I sm old,but I never mw the crammer forsakegnar his mad begging bread. So 1 beseughc Iran acidic to direct me in this great undertaking, & I Nought he did,& I came to lames Hagheses placom the mvnship at uabddge,Ne Badly an Mine friends,& osmcca le poi good neighltounA having a high command of their of my own age, we epmmutW on the subject of mar mi of cony other things perming to the Celestial an, &q&c.& wabi mm cash miters love b he coq& ban to each school& to our Grillage, joined Fans in wi l,in Warlock bode in the years 1822, & we worn hapymenally sealing to all of Ne outwit canin- ces of the Lard We began poor,as to the antward circumstances as it would be called by poopge to these dayso arked had, law send early, & Warr many years the dear Lord bleu) us with a gwtlly hentagq& plentgboth in Some & out doom, boith marry thinks to him that had compasioo on usss on the fishermen of old rmesanm mer tailing an night.jerdw ye his holy name. But 1 am for exhibited now,since I have always tried to fill my seal in his house N prayer, &let as wordly murinus prevent met, 1 do believe IM1n I hied with all of my arra, sMnBth & mig14 to do what was right in his holy sightto train those tender home; wournmed m my ehanywfor Cann my dear lam,mt others env what they mayl know & abundantly confess [list I am but a poor awing warm of me dot& ran say with the path Publican, wing he list au his breast, GM he merciful to me e Yen. I have IivW to see Gads Writing, on any ChIchrr.1mh temporal &sphimmperave ye his holy name;& he blessed us with 8 Ch dmakwhose names we — Roben,Anna.]cimrHnnma.Hnr- riu[taXeninah,Clnrksoq& James,', 6 cons & J davartme.& all of them proper Childreadat is with thanks be to God.had their natural shape%& abiliues,pmia Ns holy acme. Again I sayehat 1 study breviusbut 1 msmll a limo oboe sNchnvingro' ,in the overeat of olives. & en few of in hard Bnditficroses that w.e had to en in mase days mat re past and gone,in scrimp in n encounter entirely new pm laea in then wna demms.&r. common mnes,l never did appraove of much maavingbat we warned in max days & circumstances to be almost compelled to mwve oftener that we waned to We War dried after being marimpn a hundred acres of land Save to me by my dear lather, lying on Duensp 6 ism w or fint child Raised was bora we had sickness es wee litdu loses & disapoimmenthm, afar bang them Amp[ Ewa yearsawe moved to llnbddge,thcre we Ibcd about fmr scan, & there I had a cancer Sc suHeroi very much with that if in daeeng 14whlch card we long year,@so even was the ime with me that Iempamd of my life, & so did all of my dear neighWms around us,but with many thanks to my dear Lord & mosteehe saw fit to reaom me again to my little an ily,preisu to the lard. So in this plat, cur eldest daughter Anna was bums& our revised van EhIm.& after doing abundma of hand labodans woIX,for the time mount War years, & suffering muclawas activated to Pickermeto my JmhanAa lake re of his housgfatm,Caildm rstrck & all they had,whilst father & mother went on a long journey to Virginnigb me my member 'limmby,& this was in Ne year I1341. Also they made u worry charitable visit to my dear operation; friends at mladves in rhe state of Newjermy,which foamed to be the last van they made in them partite: me moms,n we and there wrong bntill mer averaged harem in much harmonyA goad nmersnndinge MendsNP &lave. And wan often, we convert up to the Emg send Tomnb Road, & more I look a mhook & them we lived m for about four years on a into impression to where the Iemley creating is few gantetl to Or mainly of fneodyn Cani (here ser daughter Branch wap hem.I had mind weaviurA mverel mall businesses,but I thought time of these occupations to be Nal m normal— fast I was poor& it m would be a tanner, I most go into the woods affair. Then in the year 1833 we germiked to the place that we now gw on, In the urCo, of M,kringwhere we have lived 36 flow, & hem — flarrimlgPmiimeb,Clarkson &lama was bom,BI do blast is pmon the God of Abraham Isaac if ]sob who hath also blessed us with many goad thiagspn0 temporal by spirimal,przise his holy namn,mi0 my soul. And I have it on my mind to rclam a few of the many in a, hardships difficulties & vial, ne that atly all have toprogramme, that se[k with film a bowling wiWerneRbomm it can be brought to Cultivation is a fruitful field, In the first phare. the pioneer has enorce to make a yule of xgsked or eafgwith an axe in hand,& ase his art As he you s. If run over lops bushes,& though brooks cracks & swamps & over hills & ones until with much dangers& difficulties he glitch at the much desired spot, then he gown to ening down the mere to make the ahamypr log Indent and before he is bad many, perhaps to raise lis buiifing,a few haply sells of industry & tail, mine with it shout that ll make the forest ring, is rise the iu Ing building; and now Won it is half finished his wife it cbiNren krve to mnave into this new abode, run the risk of front sick, or going lheb dnthein many mays. On one arasion door I hud mooted into a forest riffling to my newly dwelling, stood a Imp tree that maned over the house,& one tem mmpemnom & windy oughts that two kept us awake & in much Ownerm.wben the blast or ple,mook Oat as well as all of the forest about us; the hens bowN as if they must fallp indeed many did,bm that one swung over & over our helpless hands unroll daylight came; in pumps l was rover gladder to we daylight for than I seen got my axe & laid it Mllowing on IN gourd, but let me ell dice. On dem formally rcadeq that bi do often fall on the new buJdings, &eremaimee do most damage to the new hemmer & cripple people be ink life. And atom when pleasom spring has tom ,Oe poor mines now, base to be turned out be me wands to sack thea own living or stars commonly be will But them until the Calf emedibut I anways had to build a loan o Oat me Calves 4w& than brunt lasered reason leaves & all for them to t,which made a grant deal of wmkouther for male or female W denial with there leaves & a little milk we ntttl to rise army good calves. But perhaps by die dine mid summer had come the 193 Cows would grow careless & lay ouL& after the poor man had bunted & searched mane &ysandl he was discouragea,he would ret them go,&IMy wood man dry up,& do him no more good that ywr; & be world Im obliged or go out to work for n little buffer bread & meat& aro he would used, for locair¢ & more pay, &cfor And before 1 got a yoke of cook had m change work,lhat is give three data work for men & one for men,& in them days I done all of my chopping armchair in ingeiing 1 had to give four days work far every one that I got back mairy& than after that l did get oxen. They world stray off like the cowx,& might look peradeenmre a weak & not find tbcm when he most vended Nem. Our m ilcoli luecwauld be a great distance from uca g^^d nett of Ne milling was performuW by a buy ora Will gid ommg a home with a bushel or two on his back,& some tong ^s qil it v knowgm eery there little labial on their shoulderto �nill.wOWcrs drew a few bushels on a mad or a ou:bed Sticpwih a yoke of oxen in the summer on We here auud¢c&e. 't lime arc some of the muff variants & units that the new maker ohimes M1mh t steer his little bark throupjtpr founder in the starmlor in other weal he most be mainframe, he would live & div in poveny,bul thousands get wall off As many get rich with those spall beginnings, forinduslry & economy is the way to wealth But I rnmrm ban of much weahh•narther did I seek it, but my gracious Lard but given me evougulk I naso moired,fram seeking wealth & w,dry ohnot m & shin thea many years just at the pend that the soaring commences to he am up gold.the rum of the which we meq"will In, us against hinn',rhat its 'if a Iran knowmh bee is m wJl &tdonh it nal. he must be healer. with many smipei'aI most Shelly do Im- liewethat there is hundreds of thousands in this mepcWoing in the poet talks ns melgl Frim shop his prmhus bland,& trampled an the sonof Gad, But m go an with my mory,I do wider all of my worry substance only Irnl la me from tire LoN,k after he enabled me to get my wildemex fmm cleared up & well Imcad,woods & all, if a large orchard baring abundance of fruit& 1 had been or grtm expewe to build bams housm & ouNomce, & the farm well stacked &qm make my wile & family comfortable& m leave them in easy circumstances, I se Van do spend most of any no, oI pllgmmagecmetlngthe fair land of Comment how my avoid pammh for thee. On the offer side of lourdnnln Ne sweet field of Edon, Where tire once of life is ever blwming,There will be rest for you I mid so muff with the sweet poets v little more egun—I will march up the Bravely wreet& pound m, ave at Jesus Net—For the Creole of my ones salvation Fad given me a change at keep, a leaven to you, & a Fell to shun; & I was cannot to use be language of another sweet singer, Out shelf the lass emg.vymg Should earth against my soul engage,& may darts around me be Farled,Tbeo 1 will xmlle at same rage,& face a frowwng world. Should mems Iike a wild dellu8 round me fall, May I but safely rtanF my Fame, My god my heaven & my allThem will bacle my weary muffin tons oI mavenmy rc,t And not wave of sormwe roll acrau my peaceful Social. 193 Appendix iii CENSUS REPORT, TOWNSHIP OF PICKERING, COUNTY OF YORK, 1650 POPULATION Pckeimg 96 houses, 4 vacant, 7 ehmchea; 18 Whorls,; 9 s; 12 moahanls' shops, 1,023 heads of familia asysuq 601 Proprietors of real estate 422 nen propricmm; 6,074 residents; No. of School Children -1,616; Flenm Beaton, conmemtnr. RACIAL ORIGIN Native, of England -823; Natives of SwOand-441; Natives of Ireland -1.035; French Caoadiunc—I1; Naives of Canada —89. No. OF ACM OF LAND HART held by familia; 22,520 user tillage; 7,813 under pasture; 30,830 woods; 95 unfit for cultivation; Aggregate value Of cleared las per aae VS5s; Value of wild land 13; Rcpt paid by tenants SRI CROPS Wheat -7,226 acres -102,789 me; fsmk —1661y u — 3,855 be; Ryv-227 acres -3,153 bu; Omo_I.084 ss — 133,824 bu.; Indian Comre 168 acres -4,203 bu.; Baak1bcal- 4011 acres -642 ba., Polateer 345 scros 0,249 1m; Flax- 2901bs.; Maple sugar -36,352 lbs; Wool -29,102 lbs; Ydsof fulled clo1b—a5,931; Too. of linen Or moan -195; Yds. of nam nal -11,254; Cheese�c,160 lbs.; Buuer�42,444 lbs.; Bb& of beef @ pork -162; Nee Cattlti ,759; lhvoas�1,716; Sheep - 9,248; Hogs -5,188. MILLS Onst mels (wbml, oats &bads,), 6, run of stones 16. quam my preduad to bbls. 25,5W; Saw mills 24, quantity in LOW felt, board me e—,5,230,Oe0; Fulling @ Catling Mills 1P quan4ty 1a 16s 25,962; Distllentss—I, hogshead, 760, plans —156; Breweries -1; Tannery 1, IQ000 side. Appendix is FAMILY HISTORIES In the following Panes are a another M historic, M the early families of PicFerwg Thwart p: They have been gathered from anchor.Variants Some here wine from Word's "Post Years in Pickering';. Whers from Ne histories he villages and Marcos in Me lownaldp and some form surviving marommus of Mom who cohly sons. lt maoMay be observed that nOne am included which come to gluttons; after the mhelfon of d37, By MIs time Me earlier pi ring was puss. Chrminly there were still many Fargo who lame to Canada with dory little worldly wealth and who had to lake backwoods farms, carried with hush and bring them to pro, duction by sheer hard work. But if everyone who came at that period was included it would have repeated a book much longer Man this to contain the tinily histories alone. In many MIMM, Macy an similar, No one could have much comfort when there was little comfort to be had, no mads were as rough and muddy 6s one man as anomer. The chief oiRer- must nust haw been in the amount of leap available to do Me nark that had to he done and the dismatt that different families had m oarl in order to reach a down or vil Old allies were bad times but inert were goad Moral in one sapx at least, and that is that there was marc neighW(n0 than mere Is tMay, mom remarks, in the tasks of farm and home. Bots were a part of the social life as well as the economic life and the tradition M heing able to call on the maimed; to help is still abroad N Me mwmhig although it is dying before Me as sault of specialized and n¢cb:miud fmmwg, Perhaps this section on early families will draw some light on who Me pioueem none and how much Mom who have come along in later years owe to Ne earliest M all. 197 Anuery— Thomas Alt:m mW his life. IsaMlla Cameron, came fault PJshiM, Scanlan and settled on Lot 28, B.F, In 1831 and lived lbw' live, Wam.Of their Family 01 eight sons and Nee daughters. two, lames :ltd Alexander, diad in emildhoM. The others an Woad, who fuels near manning Village till his death, Ra lid, pass, tear, (Mex James Andaw], Thomas and John, Iielen, (Mrt. William Them). living on Lot 30. B.P., Isabella, who died at Duvbanon Oct 120, 1910, Pam,, who Mo- equal llm math half of the old houic,lead, Duvi4 who lived et Piakcring and Andrew on Lot 22, D.P. Andrew'a front Donald, Dzcanrs the largest milk Mor n the Monday, but in 1960 sold his loon to Bay Ridge, develop. aresod m tad Part of his dairy herd of around two htmdmd "Lill m Rrmklla lie still farms many hundreds of owned arras in Picturing, and his derpelus support it number of familia, wM rtes far bine. His modem funding mnM1W; and Immaadale m lkwer altsn have men used as illustrations for feed magazine, In ono day Ibis heal proafted 7,774 Is mdk. ArvwS— `Charles At d¢ founder of the Arms fatuity, came form MatlnelmaMly iv 1793. He ferried at whir is now Oshawa H:rlmo but an July 3016, 1bar, bvuybt form David W. Smirk, Lot fi, 6F., of Aukcnv; paying P28 tire_ His nen. Leel Andre tarvied RhuJv, daughterof Roger Cor:: and moved r this n. Hen they End their 6:11 show or pioneer sync........ grind- ing mm m a hollow stump mkmg wheat by ewrc, a ¢Rous and dangerous journey m the Ray ul Cinerea to by a .... d. boring off wakes from their camp fire with glowing blonds, bouncing mak. tats, the skins of which thou sold of u York sblllmo mmrwe In later life, least Arm, moved to Smrimm, whom 6e apron his raii Yen Mr. Andrew J. Colonel Son of Mary Annw and Thome Courriee born at Dunbmlon, I868 write.: '9n 1861 my Mather, then a widow, called a logging and burn- ing beo m char a fellow for crop. FlMfran men with six yaks of R luglme ahalns ha id,pll'ea and evmhvokf. At night wu wars aygnm having Int. Murk 1n Loyalty. My appearance at the front doe, hewme for u him to ear rwah d in a near floor mg from my ticrol A lite A nthere,of the Avvv faintlyhat lies m Port Union. PkN berg for man years and eldren J. AnnDvnbanon is active 1n em:n AY Iluin. RAaeuv — Th, lits. known Scottish ilmmigrant to picketlng was (Jung, IMMIl y, a vuduale of S1. Attalla University and 1m amuinm Baptist minister. fie joined the Lou wall of United Empire Loyalists on the Brock Road in 1817; and was followed by his wife, J:met Tullis, and 116 !cantly. They settled on the back half of Elizabeth Matdrewsgrant, Lot 19, Can. VL Broker Barclay, as he was called, had completed the purchase of this property as early as. 1819. The family was energetic and warned to have a Bale more than most as they could buy a few ands Implement, hmsea me,& and oxen. Eli Barclay's sons, Georgy, James, Welham, Land and Eli worked the form while Father improurn W Iles popular, for many miles around lie travelled on horseback from his home on the Seventh Contusion and Brod: Rwtl to Uxbridge, Clareacid Markham and south W Oullins Crack, In 1821 he became Minister of the piss Baptist Church in Mndham, where the following inter- change with his flock took place 'Saturday, ear AusuaL 1821. Minutes of Ne proceedings of omldemde, number of Baptist bmtlumm who were covert tram the Frtt Baptist GumM1 in Markham ... The secretary walk for whhh Rr Ames W,,O and due, Raand oKron wan worried w mods; agmnst Proved salary In Alder George Barclay, a which lad also been opposed by Brother Icahn Whom as an mrscrptural practice, as Christ says that an hinging citron not for the sheep beeuum he is an hireling and not the owner of the out in opposing this idea a sharp Made ensued in which Be. Amos and Sister Rachel Wixom was degraded for Ink of knowledge, called ignorant persons, and at length ordered W a total silence by Elder Briefly "a appeared angry. R. Vint The Barclays were anceduars nt me Reform party and since they were active onfomlisls, opposed the Kiieg Colkgc grams very strenuously Elder Barclay, an ordained unriversily, ined clergyman from Scotland must have bitterly recanted Ne Bawer and privileges of another Scottish remained of pwrer family than be, John designer Barclay n, net showed to marry his own periNiot¢n who either travelled in Seen, Lap' hour in Pickering or invited the go chnnumd Lrstive of Pena as their ham¢ to many them. The Barclays felt meat strongly about the iniasims not only or an established Church, but also the poor land whom. prevail entirely by the senders, ties overbearing awmde of William Allen, the lakefront measures who asseared the sminr' Yarm, served out with an much blood swear and tears; who indicated the Wises and made up the voters lists for York Est, and who in 1835, arrested Connection tenants her his from, Lot 18, and 19, Range 3. Unquestionably, George Barclay, a deeply religious man of sairmig charapu most have felt moravy right in caking an part in the rebellion. He, like all the other rebels who xaru fight - Ing for an executive reslwnsible to the Assembly, for vole by hallog chairman for all, was not prom -American and was British and not pm-mpublkaa There does not seam m is any aidonm in any of the many family «cards consulted in this book of the pmAmcricaxism, Mackenzie mutual is later life. The fight in Pickeirg roomed BE be local, against the Family Compact, wha had swallowed up sat much of the land. The Elder Nd not march with Matthews, but his farm was used moving place during [he summer and fall of 1837. The two older Barclay boys, George and William, took part in the re hellion wide Matthews Georg was captured, thrown ono gaol and condemned to nansportaGon to Van brothers [and. Unlike the unfortunate Mmlhews family, dm Barclays outlived the disgrace of re lion and spore. Goal caught school in the lowasbip instead of languishing in Gaol, Hanks to Lord Fortunes. Uit the baby, remained on Nc farm after his father died in 1857. As Me C L Bunan explains In dtcn'bing the fortunes of his onali s family, in his book, "A Some of Urgency", the Barclays and [hair mcghbom become pmycraus during the Crinsan War when wheat mss to SR.BB pe, tribal The farm lands blmomed with larger cultivated fields. Great b'ams were built and in 1865 Or Barclay, completed his now M1Ome "Ever Green Villa", the boo Til pica plank house still chinning on the Brnek Road The large house will' its fircplams, plastered walk, brick chimmys Exist S80B cash. Wath was done by the family and fncnds. Tax lovely site, Ngh in platinum! above the lake, was mhuiad by Mrs. Bardny's large Bower sudden with piano from many pans of Ontario and the United States. Life became leisurely and cam - far le. Mr. Funk Barclay still resides cm part of the property. BEm — Robert Betts was born he Os[ego Counry, New York Ate but ws brought to Ouorio. Comda, at in early age by his fmhv Aaron Bells, who took up land which is part of the Town If What, Anther son, Henry Batts, inherited that farm sat Beam looked about and found a farm at Lot 6 Con. fl of Pickering Township. He praeeded to build his log house and to clear his laid, taking unto himself a neighboring gid, Rachel Churchill, for a wife. They had num chiNren, two of whom died in childhood. Tire present shone house was built for his growing family co mtg the years, 1845-07. The older children helped by still and making their clothes, preserving the wild lorries and plans, while the allow son, John, became his factor's able assistant in the fields, for rea had to be indeed and rapt into mils, or heard Into beans for the new cruseIn fact, the doors area house burry, 1956, are all hand made, a very remarkable workmanship. Roberts wife, Rachel, tamed over the hwsekeepwg to her older daughters and plied her Won, providing causes; for neigh - bars far and all Yet she always found time to stay up at night with a sick neighbor or to help to bring to fork, the overrun baby; and ab rain real passed Hot way who wasn't And, and if n rory, housed for the nigh. Both Robert and Rachel Betts were members of Rarely of Friends. Never was their work so pressing that they meld not tend Thursday morning meeting and, of Store. Sunday was a special day for oawhip.A couple of Serrations ago, Ne Quaker Church building (now a fine memale Temple), win the Church with the largest congregation in the Village of P'¢kering. Ruben Betts war a quiet living man, them am no records of him dipping into politica. He was far mo busy tummy his wooded acresarable land that he might feed, clothe, and educate his famll} His eldest daughter, Eliza, taught the fior school on the farm of Gems Comet adjoining on the Esst side. Daughters Caroline and Addie,, nlsom torchebut all three in a few pears became the wives of s, substantial fsnters. Adelia, the fifth child, carred an by obtaining all four of her huldren for archer, of whma, Elect Crook, spent 40 years of her life in He Ontario schools. Robert Bath met with a gam loss when his son John, Ned In his curly 201. Hit daughter Adeli,is husband, Stephen Crank to the rescue by selling as; own firm in Prince Fdward Chronic and buying that of his under -in-law, taking Domain, an he Autumn of 1876. Later on, his son, Robert Crank, aimed fter bis gmadfmlmr, war taken into partnership, another house was built on the farm, another family of six childrco nss:W there antl another 50 acres were added. Today, Pioneer Robert Real, has three great -grey garb children honorariums. the Lishman, still trident an the old faro. Pattern — Cartoon Barrel with been in Scotland in 1901 and throw to Canada in 1836, locating on Imar 9 and lo, Cw. VH, his noaie being known as "Maple Hall" For many years he was one of Pickering, about prominent ci s. He w of superior education and rack an interestnin all the lie not blue mountain' He one president of the Asserted Agricultural Society 202 timing Ica years 1853 in 1859 and local superintendent of education am the years 1856 to 1865. Fora time be held the fashion of Liemnnan-Comma, commanding the sit Battalion d Ontario Mike. He was a member of Rnkine CTurch. In later yeas he was an elder and seasonal clot of the Presbyterian congregation w Claremont, Mreinnll died an refinery 37N, 1888, in the him year of his age. The family were as follows: Jsss IMrs, Than), Sohn, lames, David and Clan! a Mus AMor Johnston). In 1961 Mapk Hall is still owned by Ne Rwanda. BURE01 — Thomas Burton,a Yorbhhemm, came to Markham doat 1830 He died in WhimvBk shout 1868, and his wife Isabella Wilson. in 1875. His Nree cons, Thomas, Isrnd and Rich- atd,nodded in Pickering. Thomas Burton m niad Susan MiNgen, daughter of Major Benj. Milligan, of Mnrkham, and uBktl un the farm. Leser he az Whi¢saless first parameter, and also conducted hotel for some years. He died in years. 1900, Hear 85 Israel Burton n rriN Caroline Sleigh, daughter of William Sleigh. Mr. Burton was a refiner, but tan a butcher business for heirce time and also at an early permd (about 1855) conducted a store at Belford. Mrs. Burton died in 1909, aged 83, and Mr. But - ten losing gm:e to Chicago to be with his coldren, died there in 1910 at the age of 88. Tbay hum descumbam still residing in shielding. BuaenomER — Ulrich Burkholder and his wife came from Proms. owned 1800 and senior on the Smiley farm near Chain on the third wnasion of Vaughan. They later sold it to Mr. Smiley and bought Inur hmUmd emes around Cherrywood. He died in 1865, aged 83 yeas. His wife, Norman, died in 1863, Used! 54 years. Bath am boned in the old Mennonite amelory at FAgely. RE,. Christian Resor protect Mr_ BodM1olders funevl sermon and in those days it hunk a loam lime on go twenty miles wish hors, so they land ho stop half way and feed the horses. and Mr. Burkholder was buried in the ahemwn Names of Ne children: Ulrich, Abraham and William Uwi s). Samuel Michael, John, Mrs. Andrew Pem, Mrs. KCRer and Down. Willinm and Abnormal farmed two hundred acres from the third to the fourth. Won. formed Ne south hundred and sold ten acres or land In Chmles Pcny, Sr.. for v bock ;and are yard and also land Whom the Ihaml chomh now hands- He cold some land to lames Mainland which was owned by a daughter, Bele for u number of l0i tuna. His and, Thousand built the wuse where Course Gates lived, Somali was a customs, and also did threshing with one of that OM slam stamps. He was n 'heir larder. Abraham Burk- holder worked the north pan of let 31, concession Hl, Wliiam and Abraham married siderso. Eva and Betty Storm, Abraham used to do a lot of threshing with Nc old horse Power mncbina. He raised a large family, Susanna. Joseph, Ban, Margaret, Sarah, Annie L'uzie, Hannah, Emma, Jane, Ketemh and William. Cnaumnn —Joseph Chapman and his wife Sarah Sudan, were friends of Timothy Rogers and mentioned in his Diary some years more Busy picot the Quaker Colony in Pickering in 1810. They built log board on Jut II, Com III, shortly after their arrival bar evidently removed to The United Shies again for came YanaL 1, The I840's they command add purchased Lm 12, Commlim 111. Gluid Chnpmim, their son Momce a large and influential land owner, and the family spread to the two adjacent Ida of Con, bbl. Islli assn, Nelson, marrvd Jam Hall, and aloin children Femk, Ernest, Miles and Winifred contributed a g¢at deal to the community and to the Quaker Minting, until in later years they joined the United Cl u eb of Camda. Frank, 18]11950, was closed at Pickering College and the Uniformity of Taromo, ro ving his B,A, singular in 1901. He spent some years in Todaro as Editor of Formers Maganine for his position as a Potassium College sehoob reacher Came to an end with Ilse tragic To of the College in 1905. He also worked as an invashgamr for the Tariff Bored under Mr_ W. H. Moore, However, he is nrnt"nbered 1st Pickering for his famous farm, Crossman, wham lie bred the Jersey hard. which contributed breading stock to Items and Australia ad well as points mash kroner. He recebed $500 for the bull which was shipped to Australia. This M1CN, including the grand champion Peggy Jean and M1eN sire Brampton Gwtlmmigm Basil, were sold in 1951. Mrs, Frank Chapman still ,alias on Jon" Amm and is a charter membv of the Women, Issuance, Cmut Chapman, 1875-1951 o Unread in Pickering and nontrif bored much time to The Township Contact as a Member of from til and later as Buffer. His son is presently Aand Superintendent but has served on Council. Mks Chapman was active in the United Church, Pickering; he az Clerk a Session for a number of years. He has served his Township us a pern of Schwl Board, member of Township Council and over and manager of me of the finest family gai mal sora in Ommio. A merchant all his fife, he worked for Thaler during Ila 1890k. In 19M he purchased the store now weed by the Labdal after which he tout over Dickie & Chapmauc to 1921 he hurt the fice afore which femainW in his bands had 1955 and which has subsequently been outlined to become Pickering Post Ohba. Me Clumman's sory by bis first marriage, &ed as a reaWt of war injuries. Coxxmy — Gervas Cornell arrived in Whitby Tuwmhip early n the 1820's bat be did not mine to Pickering mnn fir 1835. lie purchased Let 9, Conmssion H, from King's Colkge in the early 1840's. During the 18201 they built the large red brick farm house still coup by David Cowan Tae Cometh inter - arricd with ted Quaker families of Pickering, and their ser Walter, who died at the age of 26, w a the fust Principal of Picketing Public School. Mrs, N. Bit of Me Whereas Institute, and her daughter, Mrs. Cliff Berkey, are the desundants of me Cometh. Cownx — "Henry Cowart and his wife and family came to We district of Almon and First Concession in 1832, after seven works causing We obtain on a wiling ship and losing all of their pay spassiall; by fire ww barge coming up the SL fswrenre River. The next year the family moved to lot 32, at Ne nmutb and mostly west of the Rouge River. One of their sons, William, as for ymn ell when they came to Canada from March, Arabia, &attend. lie newer Owned the farm, across she Rouge, bW it became the Property of his eldest son, namesake of the first Henry. "Try Gmndfalher lived there all his cadmium, years but the hole Henry, died at the age of twenty-nine when h6 daughter and beh, lanes was only a few months old The daughter, later Mm. Arthur Fades, owned Ne old Pias for many years and than sold it to Mr. Cecil White, who disclaimed it with other terms into the comm hoip of Roogc 011s This is not to be waited with the Un Rouge Hills, Kingston Road, affair was an old eam company and land a Post Office by that name, served by Page mach up until the end of 1915 wilt Me Geo. Top as Post Maser. "William Cam Sr., bought loft 30 & 31 for his second or, William, a farm at Greenwood for Robert and a farm at Highland Creek for the yunngest eon, John. The farm on Lob 30 & 31 was named Rombank by William. The ROogs River enbmtl Lake Ontario through this property, the channel being fiwener to the east when the reihway was built. From a company, and plants le ack, this Properly electrified into asummer olt w cild muting scratch of first by Galway stationat Port Union, but shortly had a stop of its own. The fast station house on built by 3W Me Was. Cowan of Watmank, but during the doubling of the salary uncles from Pon Union to Whitby, about 1900, the station bad Mom different laaatmn; finally settling at Ne siderond which had nM been extended to the south before. During the doubfng of the milway tracks, the Remge Firm bridge w east 13 It, W and the cuttings to e cart once out m 19 0. lower This eliminated a very heavy Santa which required double header ongimes. Them want mslowly that u little boy. waning to school amid title hag way on the step: of tl¢ coMoss "At one time, Rosebrmk win served by seven passenger trains, two weigh Irtights as well es Picnic Specials, and the milxay bad built a welting room we Me asst aide of the trucks which was later maned to the other side. Stmnb to my, the aeilwny ori ually rans north and south at this point. On the hill by We big oaks war parking due mouth of the riveq wsa once an Indian VJh ge of meet 2,13(h0 people. 1 did not know this when 1 buil[ my first boom there in 1916; but we were conanually landing arrow heads, skinning kntvn and iron me heads, each Be brought by la gille. Bons idemified as Indian, were found in the erosion of Ne lake bank. Ruebank has had a Pmt Office Item Jan. Isq 1916, served at first by the railway which Lives us no more, but now by centers of the rural mate. "There was a great dead of trnlrs betw o,. the two farms on either side of the siva, through a toll gate on the west hill. Ouse my broNer went aver To bring a saddle hors. home, forgetting the toll money, eco he waited a hong time for old Mr. Luke to open the gree for someone nd then galloped Unclear. He gain re- wMrcd that it was Stacey, no ton being eolleGW on tact day. A lot of this is bemmy. but l have evsy twoon to believe it." G.C. DUNBAR — Ma William lombap J.P., Dwil anon, who died title Sap, 186$ was a native of fawfencekim, Scotland. In his youth he learned the trade of caipeawr and millwright. lie earned on business in these trades at St. Andrew and Until. He erecad a statement, bridge over the river Levey. Desirous of bettering him- self and M1im than rising family of six sons and ane daughter, he emigrated to Canada in 1831, landing at (Topics afro a tedious voyage of thiMen weeks. Proceeding to l'omma then Little York, he Purchwed in connection with another Botham htmity, a piece of land an the northern share of IDke Onm,o ahem 20 miles east of Toronto. Rem M confirmed himself and draw around him n routine of old acquaintances and above firm Sardand, which gave We Unity its Smttlsh character. About 1849 he Lid out on Usown land the Village of Donbartan. He trick an early 205 and u o man e remains d social warfare OI me xvlemaHe was an elder in the church (Scotch Presbyterian) for nearly 35 yeas, was Reduce of the Pear for many years and a Commissioner of common xbwls. Hew v chief m indicating the Pickering Harbour Company, and one of the heaviest Stockholders and superintend- ent of the work. He took a deep interest in the education of the goon& and especially worthy young men who were washing (beer way to the registry — ranking a Bursary grant to Knox College fm this purpose. Extract from Deed to the West % of had 25, laureation I, Pickering, Upper Canada. "NTeeas our lieutenant Governor of our said Province hath with the advice and consent of our Said Executive Council ran - nodded to sen, alienate antl convey, the lands, tenement, and M1oreUitnnwnts, hereinafter mentioned, being part a dusaid Clergy Sneerer addressed to be sold by tile said Intl in part cited AR nota William Dunbar, His Heirs and assigns at and for the price of 1125, Inside nevertheless, oven us Our Hairs and Sneaixmx all mines of soli and saver that shun or may hereafter be found on any pan of the said Petrel or of Wm (Dwells Bear follows,. Given under the Great Seal of our said Province of Upper Canada: Witness our trusty and welbheloved Sir George Atlbur K M H. Lieutenant Germans of our said Provin¢ and Malo, General remodelling our (ones therein at Toronto. 19th October I840, By Command of his Excellency in Council. Cot of Crown Leads. R. A. Tucker Cam. No. 1113. Has aWre diihalty, in securing his DeN until nine years after he had settled in Dumbarton, probably azeoun¢d for fire feet Nat William Dunbar Sr. and his older sons were all strong immbers of the Rddmr Party. W. R. Wood, "Part Yeast m Pickering says on Page 27, 'The scotch settlement in the first and second examinations rc grnerally known to be In sympathy with the parry, Of Reform. When, toward the close Of 1837, events hastesaing to come, Pa2 sent from Treated, to pps le hand my who might be targeted of member to support Mac hold. Mr. George Whim, Mc Duubor Sc. and his two Alexeotler and Wiliam were otomy, rhoss arrested and mashed up the Kingston Road to the ury." William Dunbar', children were as follows: Brows, William John, Ale; David. Janet (died w money in Smdand), Rohr (removed to Britain), rod Pllubelh William Dunbar Jr. intend me the property and rortied on an extensive blacksmith business and working in the rest brick building still remaining ren tie Deal Romer of the bL Hle son William T., monied on business as gereal merchant in Pickering from t880.1905. Mrs. S. R. Dalss, his daughter, married the local doctor and built a hoe¢ on the property row the home of J. S. Milk uM broadly. William T's We William, is professor of Engineering, U. of T. and still owns Ne progress and farm and resides herein she summer. The farm bar always Bern rented out from cmlioat times and is prtecntly rented by the Wood family who ship milk. The Dunbar family are members of Dunbirton United Church wNch issilveredon land formerly Owned by their family. G.wOT — Rev. Adam Elliot (Inter Pound Elliott) an Anglican mandatory farm Credi rid Comply Battered and brotMr of John Ellim. who lived north cost of Pickering Village founded A. George's Parish of Pickering Viaran, Rev Adam Elliot was selected as rector designs of Embiwke. He had no funds and they wam unable to pay him; hence he went oar as a building missionary b the immigrants and basiaas of Upper Camda. As well as tiding falseback final Port Hope to Yonge Sr, and holding remains at various place; in the year 1833 he made ,primary north through Newmarket Kinn. Tecum- seh onto Oro. Medome and Penemnauisheoe. On the first Sunday In Lrnt he held "dlvme service as the home of Mc Mann at Kempenfeldl Bay". Despite the cold weather many people came to wervice, mearmis over loss hundred weds. ChWren even baptissd and Holy Communion was administered to several Rick. He was inspired by the beauty in Nes parts even in winter. He left the Indian VIEW of Coldwater until warmer weather as Ne Onew s so deep and difficult to pass On bOnc-back. later in tile a e yehe resiled Mono, Coledon, Chinquaccusy. Erin and h<ttdro. In October he want Coldwater and again to Pemmng. By 1934 Mc Elliot was convinced that "ten more clergymen wen netled for the Home District"He continued in his peregrinations until 1835 when he was asked So go to Manitoulin as a Micaonory to the Indians, which he Ad. Lmar be was a missionary to the Six Nation be fans on the Gorge River (Bamford). Here he Iabrored among the Mohawk aM other Indian Tribes for over 40 Dema. His first wife was an Indian (Raecy by name). His accrued wile was Miss Howell h'mm England,a sister of the mmhcr of Pauline Johnson (famed Indian partes.) Itis manes ng to note that G -H. M_Johnson (Pao - ale's forms) was in mmrperter for Rev. Elliot when Mf. Elliott manned Miss Howell who brought her younger 9kmG Emily, with Imo. Here blmsomed the mmanw of Emily aml the young lumbar chief. Georg, tobacco. Rev. Elliot and each of his wives were, boned near Brantford, where his name is still recovered with the merger at that place. ELLpYTT — John Eliot (now spelled Elliott) an army pioneer of Pickering Township, ea a from Nichol Forest, Cumberland County of England in the year 1923 at the ago of 25. Although v shoemaker by trade he Foci a farm near the fourth am - wisdom kin uu of Picm, now occupied by Mr. From Wall Them he built a log house and later married ENth Taylor, who me from SwRobshire County, England Her parents settled it 'thtb York" on the Don River where they establWed one of the Largest paper mills of Canada. The Taylom became well known in the busiwa life of Toronto and udded the manufacture of prnsed bricks to their other business activities. Mc Elliott brought his bride to Its farm home, new they lived the ret of their over. rasing sewn of their mince children. He cleartd and farmed his one hundred and fifty acres of land, adding his labour useful making Picketing Township a demmblo place to live. Eeuort' — "Chiismpher ENort was boon on the 15th day of lune 1838 in Pickering Township. About 24A miles north Carl of DuRms Creek, 00mar County, Canada about 28 miles East of Toronto. Ile was the second son of IoM Ewalt sad bis wife FAIR who Poor biter marriage was Fill Taylor ofYork, after - war ds, end now called Toronto. Christopher Elliott, Ile spelled his surname "Elliot" had ane sister, named Margaret End, antl seven Farmers whom named n the ordur of Neir ages were: James, John Adam, Fri Hawthorne, George, Abraham Taylor, and William Thomas Mon. Grandfather Elliofs grandstand than con- signed of a form of 150 xres or more, and, with his family, lie than lived in a lag house in which Christopher was Mm. He al- trnd4 the Araby school in the neighborhood, probably unit he was 15 was old or thereabouts, for In a couple of his school books his name is inscribed in boyish grim and the date, June 86 1852. He must have then been Id years old The' RokMm" gmmmer that he studied met have been u Popular text book of that day for it is said that Linroln ended a similar Former. When he quitted wasol he had eryuired "a good common school education" that he made Food use of during his short career. His L IMPS farm was well adapted to farming anti .stock musing 208 and these carved the principal permits engaged in by John and his neighbors. He was early introduced to work on a farm. At one time he was associated with his border John in pur- chasing and butchering livor stack for fire local markets. He lewd fine stock and raised prise cattle and shore who w Grandfather swmol m wards which had keen madsum e hJime al m Iteftlh 's for pitwining train and shone. once, soon after her triage to father. he hwl a line brooded and valuable m rvm that he was keeping far exhibition professor. Some old ins gads Tani of doubtful, or no antecedents broke into the enclosure where the nonince was pnwred and in the fight that followed We ansedirs'was broken. 9ommreMe prior to his marriage, Contingent mot with a severe accident. He was coming from Toranlo, whoc he had been visit - ng his Taylor cousins. It was in the depth of winter and he was driving it spirited latex hitched to a light sleigh or 'cutter - as it called, wu hile r sing a bridge over the Hun River on the utskirts of Taranto a balking dog ran out and frightened do horse. The hour Immune fractious, overituared We amish nail labor was dmwn from than bridge to the ice below striking spun the side of his head A severe concussion of the burinminimal. lie was taken To the home of me of Ns Taylor calices who lived near the Don and there he hovered between life and dcmh for me time. Hoomen', he eventually recovered in a memous; but Ws injury probably was in a whasImmue degee one of the causes that contributed to his early death. The years good, and in 1860 when Christopher war 22 years old, he went W Reach, near Uxbridge, about 20 miles north of his old (tome in Pkkcring and there engaged in (coming. pofHuetu — Franus FolM1ergill was King's Primer during the 1820's in York. He moved to Pickering N early 18368 W the present she of Alm, and here maintained a fine natural history museum aurins many beautiful am rare birds and amounts of North Anat He wrote hidden and books on Natural history and built up a large estate mnNining a millaswell asfarm. Sum - sequently his samily moved to the beautiful stma boom of Wm. Wright on the Kingston Road now me residence of Harry Arnold. A grea46mndwn, Charlie, moved W Newcastle twenty. FULLER — "Robert buffer suit hisyoung wife, Frances ElizabM Cmimel, arrived in Toronto in the su a of I933. They hod me from Kent in England and nmmstalked of Seven Oaks mad I ,b,dg, With, Will near words, In that interval county_ 109 •1932 was a electric yearwith widespread fear and mend. The With occurcN on August 9M 1832 Rmo Sr lswrence MaM1aY of or son aimed lams Chappel Fuller. The family were soon farm - ng in Pwkmmut township. Teo nwre tens wart Wrm Henry and William. They ,to tenants tic doubt as the first farm purchased was SO 1852 when Habeas Fuller bought the south 'A of Cone. IV, Lot 22, He purchased lots in the village of Thompson in 1859; 1864 and 1866 and builta made and barn sMl startling and he use. They left the farm and moved W Brougham where Chun Fuller died in August 1976. Rather[ Fuller married a soil and war to live at her Lome new Watton; Mary Smvg Tulles. He died mtl was taken to Picketing for burial in July 1887. "James Chappell Fuller (1832 to 1921) farmed ns moon[ fast. Want his maniere in I956 to Maria Willson, dnughmr to Casper Wilson_ In 1959 in fungicides whh his brother, Hoary, Int put abroad100 nines S. rt of Lot 22, Cone. 111. They use on this lead which is sand and quite poor for craps. The elder children went to the Brock Road School. Tt6 land was sold In 1878, The James C lamnig free is Wo:ds On us faster cn the 51h, no and the an the eldest am, ter honer Robert, graduated back- wards from this building at the age of about 12_ He claimed to have been ranee with a baeeb'all but in thenad of a rooter who was prepared to punish him quite wrongly for an offence he had anomalous In 1880 the James G Folleh left Pickering and raved to a farm in lawyer Township near Mitchell Ontario along with his eldest sem than recently memed and one other son antl four creghteo Idemy Fuller rvumW ten to Robert (1) national narrowed his momentum with his brother James in 1969. He with his wife, the former Margaret Ann Elliott along with Me and Mrs, John Palmer, the torsos sister to Shipment Ano Fuller loft Canada In 1970 and tested on the border of tlw prairie land in Missouri. Within five years both Henry and Margaret Aon bad died :long with is, infant children. The New elder ones burn in Pickering re Normal hack by their uncle, Loves C. who made the trip vin MiMmlrol'm He angler back Frances Flim and James to INe with thaw Wmiftmmna on the 4th, later in Orouyham then sit Weston. In the late Wheat of 1880 there came a young man Gem ro Min to Claim the hand of C ntu h Furnace, They were worried ser Wesson and the brother Jamas Fuller then about 17 went beck to Missouri along with them. Size Harlan, (Fuller) died at Salisbury, Missouri 1953 Waving a son, five daughtan and ninny of Ne grnerations to follow. James Fuller Icor brother died with- out issue. Zia The third eon, Wdham monad Samb Compton, both lived In arcngbam. He 4i d young saving two children Witham aM Sarah Elunxs (Delay). William known in "Dakota Bill" married in Brougham Ne daughter at u ehcemaker, Mmigie Maddock, They reired a family m North Dakota then moved Gant Bn:m 10 Sort Corset, Sask. no survivors of this branch an few in number. "bmh omnibus (Daisy) married a Scroll nn. They mixed a binary of 101 one, Mrs. J. StePbrnsoq was living recently in Pickering village Others arc in Toronto or mitered widely burger Camdv.' Coding — Sarah Gordon and her three sons arrived from York to Pickering in Ne early spring of 1837. They had suffered In Ireland sluing the fighting between Catholics aM Protnmms, and were Gangrenous. Sumt bought Lm 19 from William Allen and the boys paid toff dole sobs in William Allen by wmkin8 on the lake boars, se dint during their early days in Pickering the family awned all of Lot 19 from the Baseline Road to Ne Like. They look an active pmt In the s4rmisher brother Matthews. In later yens they old all but tire nonbcm ninutyounds acres. Joseph formed this land, made terminate, brit his ho u , whistled for the dances and had n rollicking li with his foer es. The family livid in this residence e until rm1958 when the last Gordon, Mrs. Alex Gordon, movM, to Picketing after selling her Impact An, the Viking Corlrormon, and the farm baz ounce been unultivatW. Descrndems still live in Pickering village. Gasim¢ — Thomas Costiek, sr., was born in 1789 and dim] in 1859. Mrs. Godark was both in 1096 and died in 1884. Their sand were Thomas and Iehn, Ne former of whom was bom in 1820 and died in 1894, std the latot born 1826 and died 1907. Two sons of Thomas Gostick fnided in the towvaNg Thomas Calvert (Lot 24. Con. VJq, and Pnderick (Lot 24, Cry, VII. antl Ntir deeandents own the old loll std. Goueun — WJlwm Deaths. a native of derwickshim, rams to ScarWm in 1832, and theories settled on Lot 24 (rear) Con. H. He died in 1875 std his wife in 1882. His family were: June (Mrs. Alexander Dunbar); An (Mrs. Methods); lasts (Mm. William Young); Rubber, who lived on Cop, IV. Unroll lames, and Group, who carried the old Household all his death in 1895. Alm Goodly, a deseendnm, resides on While Side Road. 14a'r — William Handel nae bum in the County of Wex- ford 4elwd, in this. He dome with his parents to Piekuing at the :tgc of twelve. In 1822 he umrrhd Phoebe Haight, who was bum in Pickering in 1810. Mr. Harbor became owner of crn- stressed Nnd An be immetllmu Aaa :hy of boosting Village. He was a magistrate far about birds, yams. The old Hamrick hon¢. stead was built in 1843 and still is in gmtl repair. He died in 1874 and his n'ife in 1982_ He had one ion and two daughters, mr, William Ifatlrick and Mrs. John Gordon, of Piakcrin8.and Mrs. land, L neon, Of St. George, Oat. Hxsatxns — Nathaniel Hustings %%a born in York(Toronm) of U. E. L. pmenbg, his father being owner of considerable land in the viomes of what is now Lesbvills. A lot of forty arms having been lmmfmW to Cadmium, be eschonged it fora yoke of oxen, a wagon and some implement,, antl with his young wife to Picketlng about the year 1828, million on Int 24, Cm:. V. where IS lived till his demb in 1870 in his 6601 your. He uxtl to relate Nat when a boy be bad his fmheis team ata blacksmith shop N York and that ionic tnilimry man came along and im- Pmeml them into the Government striate for conveying men and supplies Interim York :ted Kingston His son John Hastings tivN on Lot 20, Con. V, while me old homestead is occupied by Itis grandson, George Hostmild. The family still msde on their original farm. Horunuea — Georg 11011111I Sr. was one of the fou pioneers. He ownW JM 32, Corrosion 11 He bus the crown decd and it is still in the Hollinger name. It wworked by Itis gmndeon, Waller. His family were: Somncl, John. Willium, George, Maga eq Mary Arm Levine, Kate and I are. Samuel was born on the old manila ad In 1830. He worked part M Su father s farm. His children were: Group, Hnmcl, Wi[god, who went to western Canada, antl George married Edith Sterling Thcir family were: Tillie, Oda, Norman, Peal and Velaa. Wm, H011inger Su who was born on the old lmmeaead in 1935 mafaktl Harry Ann Ash He wa an elder m Son Presbyterian church. Be was a careful farmer and bmghtlrom his bmlbers the old home9amd. He had pass n, Welter, who Owned the old fano. Walter burned Deva Gare , Oldest daughter of Gamgee Gates. Their children weak Leslie, William, Mark, Murray, Roth, MJdrM, Leonard, Dmie, Cecil and Kenneth. Leonard lied in the old member and William bought the Benjamin Repose farm. Another ten worked be Pap Poles firm which h0 (amber bought. He made a Art stores of farming. Thcir moderate arc all buried in the Men- smile secondary at Cedar Grove. Descendants, Leslie and his son, Bruce, reside N the Almna road and ate active w church and community. Hnnvaa — Daniel Hoover, Br. was bom in 1809 and died in 1891. He married Fanny Recent who was born in 1813 and died n 1878. Tbcy belonged 10 RE Old Mennonite church. They settled on Lm 35, Consortium IF, PGznng around 1835. Names of their chill Peru, R Hoover, millet atDickmn Hill, Forest Hills, Clarkes Holbw, and Orem River. He served as councillor for Ne Warship and also Justice of Ne Peace. Neat were Abra- ham, Daniel, herm Deojamw, and Della who married Fnus Hoover. His »n Daniel named Julia Ann Burkholder. He worked his fathers farm where Lloyd Taylor mw lives and he also was a Ihmberr He btleured to rhe Melhodiet church HIRMOun —Thamm Hubbard, 1759 -1853, W his forday were Umhtl Empire-Loyabsts who came to Pickering probably in 180, possibly 1799. N any occur Thomas, in 1803, was a mem- Mr of the corthend Pbkcring-Whltby'rownship Council and le became the first Clark of cite Township in 1811. For nems noun the family did not parent Nen In W. Lot 19, Concession V, maul 1821. That is they old not esti a Crown Grant However Nay activesurner farmers and Andrew Hubbard m 1812 Vale among Ne htiitiam who oink part the a mmmmu against the notorious in FAR Lde HE ncand a decoration for alow, awardined in Dr. BcaddhnF s Memonal Volume, "Toronto". As well as cleanup their farm and Nretting the work of the Emancipabtg the NmJy donated to Has small home-made stool its building site. Andrew, Thomas Hubbard's inn, brown at the close of the wet of 1812-16, the fiat postman in the ToVrwmp and he spent many long hours on horseback taking the mails up the Brock Road to Uxbridge. The Hubbard property was increased to include parts of lot 19, One IV, where afiord Hobbaof still asides, although the farm iuelf has bum sold as aEconomic. Andrew GW ns Lot 19, Concession V, at present and has regarded the original lrome which still eanhus in the basement its old error- s apple and Vegetable bins made of hands which me at Ri hirty inches wide. TM1e house is stall bar in good condition and hu survived came one hundred and twenty ran of weathering. The Hubbads were members of the Reform party and were among the Brougham men who nmrthed in 1837. 213 JoxNSTON — Oliver Johnston was born in County innocent Ireland, in 1803, and came to Canada in 1821. He mNM on Lot 16, Con, VI, In 1847 hemarried Elizabeth Smith. They had a family of ten children John, Arthur and William (all of CNGugwcN Township); Sarah (Mm- Underadtlen); Thoma, married Anna Rogers; Mary A.: Sopbio (Mrs. Henry Russell); Martha (Mrs. David Russell, Lot 15, Con. VIE), and Laumlot, wM marred Hardy Taylor and lived on the old homestead. Oliver Johnson died in 1897 and his wife in 190.4. Oliver', grandson, Lloyd carries on the family name in Brougham where he trader with his ,it and their son. Be has been Clerk or the Township ,imus 1940. UMonaaux — lames Umoreaux was Retention, in 1812. He was of Huguenot descent and had lisetl in the United Shies, He bore acres in the War of Enteprenemo His planar regulators eluded one or more trips m Kingston with a grist in a Mawhich had been built on the Rouge Rived Me Peeks and another act - her were his compniom. The voyage took about three weeks. MAJOR — About the middle of the eighteenth century titres moves hearing IM1e name Map, — fond Uriah and Thomas — emigrated !mm Cwlhill, in Ireland, to the New England uvlany of Vermont. Hem Joh, who afterwards became the Rieneer_of the Majors of Pickering, mnrried Margaret Reynolds, with whom on the outbreak of the Revolutionary War he betook himself Ont to Nova Seeds and arterwaM to the then fardistant warned' provivs of Upper Canada. They soled in the PERU Cemeninn of Pickering mod their descendants have been nmong the important constituents of the later population or He township. The village which gradually sprang up, and is now known as Whilevale, bore for many year, Ino family name, king known as Majorvilk. The Majora cards - Find grist and saw mills very early in Wtun ale. His datyhux Mary married William Sleigh. TM1A, family count John, Thomas, Camaia, (Mrs. Israel Barton), Hnrtlet (Mei, T, P. Whim) and Tabalia (Moo William M Mott). His daughter Hannah married Pete Matthews, who suffered e at tin spent of the Rebellion of 1837. xHis son Samuel married Mary Smith. TLA, firmly Amer WA - mon Edward, Frank, Samuel, Wesley, Margaret and Abigail. William oohed Emmu While M whom he had the following family, William. Henry QnI 27, Coo_ VL Loan, Mary Maud (er Rev.1. N. Robirwri Lyda Gertrude who. Adam Won son) and Lily (Me, C. A. Ih rmun). His oil Henry soared land Smith a, his lint ire. Then Small, wcrt: Mn n Fr loszlH Va[dmJ, masse 'Ind wife 8idoey. William and wrrmony, ve a owned :n bb second wife Lydia A, Fit,, (x. rs. MAlmlly, wore: ), Jamscto (Mrs. Herrick), therm(Margaret Hllcn (Mrs. Mimmust GaltLarry r James Clns Angeles)Wald, Paind(MN_L.ohn STnh isolated. Lew Susan All (MST. Word, Conde Risk I, IOM1n 9[I&II 6rnrd ( Susan Co (11 t W. H. yead,a, N envy ). Albert FAwuti (Lel 20. Con. 1A'), Wnller ScH and Henry lid by warned tulel. He xoo ri the m reed nod se ra, The. the IM1w Mnjm bmlhern Alfred Te me mree smim arsmm TM1omar fames were (Mas. Alfml Tamer), lune fM¢ Charles GmaM1llll 'Jolla (MIS, tlnmmn). Mrs. lie far and ',nun Newlon with box uldhourly still rc side on the (non ('accmion five. in IM1c Iuamiful oW sbne farmllnuxe. MOTnlaws — Although ISN of the United GmPim Lnyaliu grams bud bell handed Om before Piekminp TownshoP veers "I veyed, In (M1c districts cast of Clarke TnwmldP and %car of Niagara Polls. a to' houllies were granted land on Pick crong. deep n We words on the Fifth and Sud Concessive- Antmy them ,ere the Methanol Tmmnns Malnwvr in I799 w s Elven a Crown Grant of 350 son,— Lot 18 rod plan of At 2 CON V1, Pielsting. On this beautiful, bLh tc of fertile black IS overlooking Inks Ontarin, @c buml)including Ouvld and Peter carved of a term. They most have wnrkcd endlessly ain[c they came to Pkkedng and nothing but then Wv personal be longing,, dm seed grain unit a to, us dummd by Ne Cavern - room, and their own magnificent nmrale. In 1811, Them, Matdmws is mentioned In Inc Township 'cords as bekg a member of the Camtdli "as for many years dwortft[r It pnhmsmr. He was realpmodd, for Ila` Bursa Read and chnnaed it from so Indian Trail to n path wide s neugh for ach to n{ nv no and down to Uxbridge. As easy m UU3. (rohere lag a stage conch rainuilig ^P the Ruling Road to the Fifth Commssion and then West to NemmalLet The work done an township road, xitn the exception of tM Klnesmn Road, s unbind n c hMmmedic id r. The meidt landowners than Spent ore days at backbreaking and making roads wnicM1 ran pan the wild leads of the racer element landowners who Settled tuatlOn ON, well as Inbaur. capula Mathews, as wall as eatablia ng; his Imm, married a second time, Mary Aaiun and thus acquired an additional 300 acres of land, Lot 19, Coronion VL The family wee therefore from early times large landholders as well as prominent In mm - ship and chmoM1 wignis,00m. The only remaining building on the farm whith dela back to pioneer days (and wemust limit Ibis pet'iW to 180035) is the film. A small bankbvm with so4d slow foundation re The crude lira shanty and later plank house were desist many years ago. The land itself is truly regardful, and still well farmed by its prexnt reach, he personal, who base built One buildings recently. Howeveq we bear learned tram It Matthews If Ornumilm, that the fust years were very difficult, everything doae by Faun and an entities walking up and down to the Kies, on Roatl with grain In be ground it Timothy Rremsr mill after 1807, Pmmf, was turned to York mind it,, several years the roily solid Ilford a Mme end aeon and life was not so dreadful, it tied been from 18M 05. The but when crops bad to be taken to Whitby and York to be sold and Shared Game and fish shoulder! and life must M1ave been somewhat like a summer rear during d¢ summer without any of the luxam of rammer life. Smaller momhers of the family were sent to fish and higher berries which abowtled VegetablesJust wthout any rouble. Out the work of clearing the land continued almost all of their lives and money was almost n m-cuwam. Fuel, of mune, aMuvded The madmen were first wnght at home, but soon the Matthews, Hubbmds. Majors and Willson, of this neighborhood buds a crude lag aGcal M1amv on the amne, of the Fifth Catholic, and me Brock Road, which they n aanw! ,Or of chat, own precious nh1 well lata the 1800',. Thr, summarily resented this crude education for their cMldmn — Peter Ind Hannah Major Matthews had towns ulamina, vad hdr oppononliss were in dreadful coo- need to the pupils of the District Grammar School in York, con. ducted after 1805 by he Rev. Gearge ORill &out, a Pickering apacmcc landowner. When Rev. John Strachan took massMuxa- it beanie m labor and rtceivM enormous land moue grm6 ea reasons, and Minimal, Show rep as v cel[ of he armyunfairness mf here subew; lto onlym-eoncan ons,mount resealed the cernirnna of sum subsidy to only Rnglican schools and churches. TM same bittemestlbelonged elo d with raved W the Methodist in i h wb&h the familyhiw yfor Mew Egerton Ryerson ap, rid- etl in this district on his way from Newmarket to Pickering, rid- in down the Rrcck Road. Peter MavM1ews is listed among the droops to the new College at Brilevfue, and he was unable m carry oar his pledge because of bis Cand. The family behimad o the Croydon au¢M1 at Brougham error it was built, in Be 1950•; and here Captain Thomas Mandewi lame was placed after it was removed from the farmyard graveyard on the from Tim Matthews men were all approvers of Witham Lyon Mar Kenve who was up mdenl speaker at the meetings Feld a Financon's Tavernan the Black Road at the Fifth Concession For almost Ihivyfrve pairs they paid taxes to the Government of Lipper Gnatla, indicted by absentee landowner William Allan. Them taxes wee used solely for the support of urban, chiefly Anglican and Family Compact Govnnt paternalism, far the meds around York and other govmmem expends. Bottom me back to the Iowushir in the way of help except s pittamm for me upkeep of Ne Ismaston Road. which tramafermed itself into a good plank Proud as mon m ravelled of of Pickering and into York. The toll gate was a source of irritation to assay one Pursing over the Rouge BriJge. The all took part in the rebellion of 1939 and Peter Matthews win carbonate. Peter and M16 ompeniws were matured to Ino Goal In Toronto and hem be was onmnetl to dent]' for n. Approximately right toomond sdegeople Portland for the Blease of Lounl and MalWews but to no avail. They wine sentenced by Sir Gwrge Arthur. Dr. Badding IM1e eminent Anglican historian of the Period writes Untilof then death; quoting from an eycwhives "We m Uunt haanJ solwws at the rut total sM1 , whim she upon Kele heuds r on omving m the almspa, although IM1e smla Were eight. and the anent almost pLeast irrat b they mouth IM1e surge wlrM1M, h, Icuu duration, deputy fiat followed by the though Mat hens did and the Jwith t Mr. Baird Some d ve by his RIlt Matthews but not accord h with mo firmws displayed by his lelg Pon he but they Jo his memory injustice, for I was laking upon n rented ns of LMh whM1 inlmx anxiety, to ad whether each disgaced his name, or the coax in wNete be had unlike. life, rr No them was nolo m my vision, IM1e loadinghtest Irepi- the trap Loom lurked up f tJ bowed to sl then loading upon Be Imp les by the ore of o e nurses, h e care was d ovecidr about Iheb necks by the raMr and the care pulled over Heir faces. Ono of the clergyman. ;mal Mr. Richmtlmn, were a prayer and in an casualty.ns ant after Nett Iwo M1eroic souls were usM1erM into Their execution was a cruel, Mryh and :moS'emer unnecessary pmuxtlin6" David Matthews managed to lift himself shove the hamiliation suffered by his decd EvEnI tough nstl he mnainW N Patent ins, for theremainder of 6t, bF, for men Luyl'aywla Matthews and grnmbon Died continued to insurers the pmih buff of Lot 19, Con, VI during For Income. David also operated a large hotel In Brougham and h6 widow finally sold this property to the Township Council for township offices . She Mary Metthewa moans in Rrougham, the sale remaining Pickering member of the family. MCRRAM — Daniel MCBndy we& bom at St. mai s Point, County Wnyd, Iceland In lone 1818. Immigrating to Comar in the Spring of 1837 he settled Ont neat Whitby antl then moved to the Village of Audley where M remained until 1901. In 1847 Ins married Ellen Bfaderick a native of Kilkenney, III Twelve children were turn m dune Robot (Rev. Moll Mary (Mother BaNllde); Lina (Mn Conscious tTNeip of Toronto; Muria (M¢. Cetnld Lang) Whitby; William of Port Anbuf; and Vincent of Toronto were Prominens in Ibe Law Profession; Earphone (Mrs. h P. hung) on Chatham; Kate (Mrs. George Cowan) of Pickering; Daniel of Vancouver B.C.; Allzrt of Chicago Illinois; Frank of Donor MicMgan; and Lancs Of Pick - worse Township. In 1901. Daniel and Ellen moved back to Whitby. Ponied died an January 27fh 1907, and Ellen on lune 6th, 1907. Robert McBrady, bourn Tommy 24. 1848, was Nen Om child. At the age of 26, on May doth, 1871 he was ordained in Rome, Indy, becoming a Imembin an the R:wilian CNn', Vaned in seven languages as bugle at Asmntpnon Collegeusual in the Language Department and St Michaels College 'romnta where In big later years he we, [It ... mcint He died on May 4, 1936 at the age of 88. Another child Mary MCBndy, cacmd the Lomla Abbey and was lour known as Mother Batbildo. lames McBmdy, one of their younger song was Wrn on July @dt 1867, at the humid homestead In Audlry, where he grew up and mmll Ellen Mary Goland, of ChertW'ooq so November 25th, 1890. This marriage was temad ebb rtn audit child; six gids and two boys a -three gids and one bay used at an early age; the other children won Josephine, Elia Mary and James. A well known buffer, temof, was elected to the Pickering Township Council and latterly occupied the Roger Club. In 218 1907 flo fumlly moved to Pon Hope where lames w.0 10,11 Agent fmMassey Holds In 1910 they mored to Ile the, I.. of Oshawa where lie was promoted to the position of Gu+uml Aguas far the Company He was a very "Lose alwalCr Of Sc all me Gmal Roman Catholic Chmeh and aro sewed on the Srpnrum Soared Board Ilor many you. Always ae Mutant, and CivicMutant, he became Oral Deputy Be...lin 1920 21, wd was apphmW C;firman of the Board of rick lana died on DanMor 16, 1921 It the nge of 55 and Ills wife 1`I1e1 died an OctObcr 8th. 1957. Josephine, their alder dauriner. nearjaral Joseph JONon of Efun, brain, on Jam Was, 1926 in 9t. Grogrry the Great Remnl Catholic Charm. Calm . Them habil x re born m them; James, who died In infancy: Pmom fkfts. Walter Mc - Meant and Tomer the Jordan Yimdly ww rcaida in Oshuxa. Man, ;raided John F Smllard of elnnlunom in 6t. Guests Na Creat Romnn Ca ill Church on August 26 1925. both rchill n blessed this marriage: Neu, who did at drc free of 9; Patricia (Nits. Garton MurpaID: Dorothy (Mu. O. I -Em; m+d 611 Man,. The SwAmid faintly now acids 5e, earned Mary, the v0ungest daughter of Jahns and Ellen. married Anhur 11. Coleman 0o Novon+her 211, 1945, In Our Lady of Sorrows mal Catholic Church. Toronto. They have six said- n- Gwen 1Mm. Frank Hickey): All Allan; Camilla (new reaction i1 , Catholic College in Uganda, Bunch east Atrie t Robcn: and Gcmga. Mur, (Min. Coolant) Mer ulwO, amen aadae in Dale ata Charch aPairs. and is presently the Fhn v1m ParWarner, o the '1'omnm A[rJtdloccsmn Cuu+¢p u( Catholic WJa 's our, James mr,l ,an aura In Flamalt In Detroit S;m, and of their ;n an, Juuebyp Patricia holt nand 0,19 i0 urri yc u out l+on;. J+uvq a nrunuln by p+'ufdsiun, Jiod tenure: 20, 1960 MCCnrm;n— Andrew McCreight came from behind in I835. Ile had tura son,, faces, John and Andrew. lames mora u Owulwoal In 1898 and m rood Mary Are Brown, who also call from Ireland. He was born in 1814 and died in lital He awl+;II of Ne Frsklw Pmsbytorian Chvcn. Name, of the ehfthem who affrom J Cherrywood school: Mnmy loos. Margaret, fear, hAbdiu and Elleal He sewed as hoes, 11 Oe Wwnuhip fora number of :.mars and Ww served in the county council He was Jostlre of 1M Pm,, rot a n,,the, of sears. Ile bought the farm lot six hundred III the uonA part from Mr. 81mnk of unusual. Ernest Anmd'o.I, all ffinWn+t ecopics the farm at the present time. He was one that favored higher educe - and three N his featurers were teachers and two helped to keep the home. They w words ending from higher! m Canada. Lames MCCreight on Cherrywond after s place in Irelli Mowtmav — Ralph Mowbray (whose Ndfirm, Sohn Mowbray. s native of Ayrshire, Soldiers) was born in Indeed In 1989. Homamcd Criterion Walker and aferwmd while still a young Mae Collie to Brooklyn, N.Y.,mbm rs w Y., whim a of you spent. In 1833 they arm, to Cnn:ula, uad heard on lots ] and 8 in IM rove of the ran nationalist of P;rk,ihm the tiro knojng card and nasi as well as circ lel surmlies, were carried on hie beck from Bole York, The only smiler near them at tint wa Samuel Munger_ Whitby was for many your their base of sup plies. Their family woos: Matilda; Hugh, who died in 1910 of the no of 87; Eller, who died in 1904, aged 97; Phillip, who died In 1910, ruled 80, and Ralph, who died in 1886, aged 53. John, above mentioned, married MaNm Hyland and settled in Reach. His son, Ralph R. Mowbray, w e of I ickesing in 1911, mtnming t0 me tmmsep when a r Mg man of U. and has been a resident whom It ever sins. He In, served the muni- cipality in township and county councils for eighteen Yeas. He occupied the written a chair in 1893 and in 1909. On Sahaday. May 20, 1911. at the liberal wnvendom or Whitby, he was un- oosly choice as the orndidam of the party to comer the rid rg at the next provincial election. Mowmays still farm in Pickering and mnlinue active in oun- ail and church. Ralph's son was a member of Council and his flooding Milton Mowbray, is presently a Member of Conrad, 1961. Poo.mrn — Sherwood Palmer was both in Scarlwm in 1999. He married Martha Lamoroaux in 1820 and crown to Pick criug in 1834, settling On Lot 20, Can. IL Of his family of mq live at - raised m wre re years, ne follows ImPabtlo5 fare 1826, died 1892; James I. Palmer, Park 1826, died 1905; Sarah Ann Palm - ca hmn 1831, died 1893; Sherwood Palmer, boos 1843, died It sad Civil le, S. Palmer, earn 1846. Jaama I_ Palnicr when a boy eftmak d school for mme years in Ohio, whom ono of his ,mp,mions was Low, Omlold, after - ,am Presldaat lames Pelmufor many sees operated o sawmill to his loan, per north of the Seemed Conversion lino. He .served 220 the township a nalmr ;,ad deputy ren olid n lir me most rure:inanI m mina of ma Diwiplos rAomL on the Klagsmn Knnd, James Palmer. a desmnadmi Penalty in Pickering Village at present. P:ILIPS —Blared Phillips was born at Bonnas, LmInIw w Pr 4wland, Oct. 51h, 1790 Ind died July 21m. 1945 Mr grand- million Mary Hailey was tom at 51. loFm, N.B. 1790. Grand- Imbo and grandmother had ten ahildeno They name to Upper Canada prior to also BebYlloo of 1837, and with Lite older man - fears of the Sandy Ming note 1n obtain weak, nem .mon Comfort ably shamed After looking u1un4 memlA M1or obtained one of the line 0r weaker Saint kn n land at that tai who he tf reed hie faintly and met his male in dr, Pull Pul of his life by a falling vee and was baled on his Peon farm was, where the Clifford unit Oni are now laced. Job, Pride Philips wan the oldest of the Remy. He maarel n education and taught school eight repay outer wallto ma, led and settled loon at farming on lot ,2. 5d1 Co,con., Ymkering. He sea, balm in 181 i. At tea ages or 20 yeah, he way 11mat inler- "led an the pofinanI unrest Corning In Canada. Canada had a legiyladve Pal ly luted by me people. The British Oovem- rosmed by a dominion Governor, uon he wedition]edition]by a am repLcaulatwe Contact and an aw,wiw Call appointed for lire by the cutout's xupmyantmnv. 'nwr wine frig constantly bounce the down, ry s a lion Repretently ten and the People's k, knownttoday. Thum who consistently maintained that by the People rho dd he lithe Powintiimenue t. a e, the isolewM1Y the gor an thou Councils M1e it 6wwer of body, rodsthe , tricot of Govrnme tThoswith power of Vein. mmp.N in super of Government. Those who opposer this along w th t e m known it I e Ref this ,hila those mho wine owwith ddaaCmwry and.I,, adenoidal d est has unry4 condition were owe as the L,yeaill ran n a r e . lily see P— Pvudy Compact fair Pill o m fnmlihe sea amt .. t path re car r the e0tod of lw on Pool TM10 crew Sal too head after Ne aleuron of s ilia In which the ediamnpm tremor campaign by 1M1e Councils t t 'I Reformers mere i the must wrtupt mntpToo parotin m what the Reformers in No general election tha TM1e Reformers or what w would t oil, wentedPropaganda being that the Saw, Th use act.odisloyal, that they ry most 10 poli the Unitedto SNms TM1e Compact. cone prevented vary as t a the Polls he 1e The result of Nk prevailed campaign war the defeat of the Rad orvt Ymg in 1816. III Thin was; a very great dooms immenl to Nc Relator movement Its leaders, Mackenzie and many or the heal others of Upper Cannot, after their efforts bad Idled to Nae the British Gomr. many intervene, derided that the only thing passible to do was to forte the Was. John Phillips was a young man of twenty, 4 pro - Joel wnvictiom. who pinN the crosade against mis.rvle and found mora if armnpW agmina the Government Militia at Mtm - Bmmery's Term an Press 9rcn, 'Toronto on the llh of men 1837. The refile barn poorly aimed. same .mon dispersed, wile xapin8 with their leader to the UnI1N Smlq other being np- Lured and hanged as were Loam will MmWexs_ IoM wet lucky to cscu{e and was pardoned atter residing in the United Stress for Air yeah Pofv — The for Jordan poll, was born in Connecticut In 1767, .vented in York, Upper Game&, about 1796. at which time In marreed Melinda Woodruff of Pickerikey He was a set maker and ownnd much kind in nc member pan of which is' new (be Gly of 'Genres. landed and Melinda Steen in Toronto went named after them. Later, Mr. Post traded 15 acres at the enter of Yorke and Melinda Brs. for 500 aces in Settlements and eWed his family in that oma. George WssM1ingern Post. M1k brother, salted in Pickering very early u the Whey of lbs Treating. He is fir4 listed as an ekekd mucase in like mwnsbig ramex of The Town Meeliner of Masb 6, 1815. He subsequently held many other important town- ship o0lccs. George Pont died in 1837. wil a family of nm sons and two daughters. The mm mnu Am, John, Hien. George and Jordan. TM1e laver, building The Rw nw n Kingdon Rwd. The Pmt family Mme was formed Iwo mines and of Pieter- eng vieng ,n mal a, Calk. H, and was for molly yeah a anµmg stations ,r Inn and the Rene of many ivory ars mlerding limes. With the udvent of lire Grand Took Railway in 1856, staging berme outlets rill the le1roMs of Pmts stopping P1oa proud into mainly. This vern was engineers]engineers]will cM1okm in 1932. looked For. the reopen, was Mr in 1816, may Will Pmt Manor me a Nedmely young age of 27, Madldu his tends was 21 at the time. Lod 19, Can, 1, containing 200 sorts bid been intended to the Honorable David William SmiTM1 on July 16. 1799. In 1837, Ar Pmt, Gmrge's Was, ryrclmW 33 acnx ot mal 19, Con. 1, wort of rend Moment RaW from Jahn Tesend member with IM.mnth WE M W 191 Con. 1. film D. W. Smimb. Laser his Nether Jordan bought We property, time, Jordan nwb IislxJ a sawmill on Dufen'a Cock at the spot where Joel, Read craft it He enjoyed return pmaperhn which included an actioncapon business to the United Stens. Panhvmrly through the Oswego, N.Y. area . Jordan died an March I, 1860, :it The age of 46. Matilda lived on uni APN 9, 1886, being x resident In the house for 45 years. Two tall grawm Hui mark the spot whom Jordan and Stands fire burned in the old aneroid in the south side of Kingston Road opposite and within sight of the house wNeh, together they had boils and lover Of the tumily of eight children, only Thee clothiers remained in Canada. The live song all moved to rho United States, Sunn : Robert, Charles Asa, prompt George, John Janes, and Walter. PUeealry — Leone Purloin immigrated from Whitby happen. York- shire, England. To The Audley charier of Pickering Township in the year 1851, Taking for his wife Ann Bolted, formerly of WimninFhnm, Yokel iib. They Pechased a portion of Let 6, Concession Ill in 1854. Among many later land acquirements was the Joinable of Part of Lot 5. Concession III from lames Madill in 1887 where stood a log house with frame addition Of this union year born away children— Sarah, R¢hmf John, Thomas. Mary Ani Simon and Hannah, all taking fasideur :mtl living fall limos with ninny Pres' ant sawmdants in Pickering Township. PUGH — Hugh Push was born March 150, 1777, mer Llan. badnrnfyndd. in the County of Radnor, is Wes In Uniformity, 1805, her married Elizabeth WJfmms, who was taro May eyst 1787. Hugh Pugh coma to Canada in 1837 where he monied and mixt his son Robert. His family arrived in 1842. Mr. Pugh was To deacon in Ne Claremont Baptist Chi for some years till 1864. when he Meaine ono of !ho organizing of the Whitmmle Baptist Churl. His wife died lune 26th. 1870. and he three ran later, August 4ty 1873. They over the parents of thirteen chill of whom Twelve lived To mature if.. Hugh, William, Edward, Dit Josiah, Thomas, Smphery Price. FJim (imps, Williams Lewis), Mary (Mrs. Cincinnati). Sarah (Mrs. James Ever) and Bllaabeth (Mrs. James Whim). William Pugh far home in curly HE, and Ens not been heard of sOEd ward Pugh mmried June Point in cartoon, and 1847 They sailed for Chance. but Mrs. Nigh died un The woe. He soulod on Loc 12, Can. IX. He died at Hinter, in IN94 at the age of 85. His family were: Edward, who married Ann Linton and settled in Chiough io,miip, David. wine nowded Mary Mo—dllh and wool 223 to MBuerlem Sandy (Mrs Robed Ward. SvssM ISMI. and Jane (Mn. William Edwards. W famous. United Pal sonic to Canada in 1846 am lived on Lm IK Cm IX. His wife as Shamir Evay. Their family woe: David (mmdad Margaret Morgan), Thomas Omni Such Wal PAward Uni June Edwards), lune (Mn. Wier), Elimbeth (Mrs. Thomas Leaper) and Smash (Mn. Percy). Mrs. Pugh died in 1853, quid 24, and Mr. Pugh in 1954, agd 91. fired Pugh nomad Jane Morgan anti hived on Lo127. Com. 1V. Of Neter family George 51111 lived m he (am. Emma (M2 HM) m Unbridle Township. Marion (Mn H. E. Paynter) an hat 25. Coo. IV, and Elizabeth (Mn. Oaulry) :a UMre. Mr. Pugh die in 1897. ngN 71 yours, and Mrs. Pugh in 1907, aged )5. Thomas Pugh married Ann, Evan (daughter of David Evans, who was for sonic years a prominent Baptist pear and prercher in Ne township) in 1863. They lived at Int 26, Con. 4. Their family we : Evammi:e (Mand William Bulabow, charged). David E. (Law 19. Cosa II). Thermo I. (ol¢vvxd). Alum (Mrs. A. Antis, indoor A. (Ln 22. Cm. IV). Hugh goon the old farm) and drum L (Man Rev. E.1. Hawkinge). Mr. Pugh died in 18% at The age of 71. Thee nn, still Pughs in PickeHm, active In Council, School Boards. and idur s. Reamoswor — JGi Bernard". a Quaker farm Oueenb County, Intend. omved ci a 1818, with We We antl family and avoid lot 3. Broken Friend which he pmrinxd from Elizi hN Beach worse M Smidd in 1824. The ehiertn wart was fol. bws: Jame. RnMn, John. William, Joshua. Dome (Mn. merger - 010, Caroline (Mm Gm. MCGillvroy), and Mary (Mn. Rowe). Son lames monied Ellaaldb Valentine. and their children were as follows: Ann, Satoh, Josiah, Kam, Lifece. Emma, William V, Mary Ann, Caroline, Louisa. Charlotte, ;and James T. This enormous Daily pmalmod and by the [Days when the Ontario County Atlas was Printed. they owned n a thmamed clmnar tM inert Kind panel N TM Iakefmm and lived m 6ng. Ivnwnnly fnndJcd bomend They we Tmwship Control. supported the tenor Metdngs, senttheir chiercn to boarding submit in the Stares in the early does and greenly to Pickering College Unlike money of the earlier Loyallu within force the United Stares, they wean educated pound. They all wane a good kind and their needle -work, et of the highest standard. The Write of James Richardson, a (urge s orc muse oThe Willowi', was destroyed when the mel fillnl plant Took over the lovely Panne of Ajax in 1940N2. morrow — T M1r Rugrc IM W.'al Uuakar cnkmia aN preachm. was impossible fur }i rr nR lsecevr follow. M "Friem6", something nw-0uuors, to Pickering waves Je Sem, 18111-1810. Utet he anumPd the trial gokm mtkm:n I prop), e. low pp), settled an vouch cast punion of the Township IukMrnnr Rogow purchased and mold ever It houcard role, in land. Inc. his ,to Small Win and their Ilflem children. Crime In Upper Canada in ISM. and anked in Nexmarket. In Will, In maned ran 4Iris family to Peening — weal xmw with Heir familiw rtwLwd or Yung, Si Sarah did inpialk and war, monad in Pickering in INC. In IS IJ. TimwM Rogers re-marriN mW mo uhd rive more children. Minyng tire wool number to Vacant, wDescendant, riDexvndan , of'I intnlhY s tougher Jfary, find Asa Roger,. bis iu-Lw of then nand to Ibc In this dimiew mil now, the Jentb of Clarkson Rages, In the 1940 a. Mary: ,as Elias. vnled am Nonage Stan[ and his d,sm mi nts have hen national in OnmwW transient virtla for th, pmt hundred years. Gnus wm. Elim a Jimr of Pickering Cotten, MiM,,,lrha arm RiuniNsdr rang, HK and Rugen' Sa uwh aHw ()aker Mmimg Iluem in what u ar Morlry Park. T'iamm, rd his footsore. ergot 11 we in& hm his grandsrm more. willed a Mamifm farm So the Tamale and his eased- children, m dHb Pickering mad Nomination. garrisoned [he Imps longer- L11 Oil CO, destinations a C...dant: ad the Flim Roger, Coal Company Nr. Guv IAri kat us the iinalta ly "1),W, poNms we xluch deal, rano rly mnlementr in Pihcralp Unlnnr ad early pictures nl IM Tamil, aero Imt in On Iia xNeh desiri the old historical in Newmarket. Tinunhy narn-17541829; Mary Rogers-19x2_lxn9 idea nl ePndvmio in Pickering. Files Rogers—I x116-Ittel Srsaas — John firms, cane in the century willed nn Ne Inks share dirctly xwth of the she M Pickering milate, to terming no form, attach of the wool xm ahioped by %hnmr to AfmNS York. Ne Sears, worn at Furchmam his hurldine awl to pairing ehiM then. Salmon, at that time ahumlaot in JLlbn'a Clock. wen it &topic where of rand and mane of them were mew Workmm in HIS future capital. that n ,, Ihomm. lames amt illiam. want Prominent in lake minmm� it generation ago. Smn:a — Samuel Y. Sai and his wile son will around 1785. They art ware of the firm ankrs who am blood is wine Raw, similarly. Tev ams farm Pala, and owners Wt ya. un 11. Pekenng, Their children wine. Christian, Samuel, Pere, Jmeph. Abraham, Herman and two decisions. They al- lended are III Moroccan church. Chricom marred Nary Shank and farmed My acres on LM 39, emission 111. Norms, of fair family were, Joseph. Manhood. HNeq Fam a, Susan. Annie, Swww, Meme, Dariq FJias, Leri said For, Youngest n of aWw martial Matin Burkholder and load on the old farm. He bare had it to Pascal Canadian. Slim Abraham BmA lender married MiaabeN Hamer and bought WI 30, concession 111, He Mlongod to the Reesor Mennonite church. He had two children, Marsha Jane end Jesse whom mad Alia Seer. He eased to drive the brand wagon for Mnrkhnnl Woo, Around Sorcf Sr. Lind east of Clarks Hollow. He married Susan Shank and his children worm Christian. Amos Simmn. Pmmanlm and Fanny. Chrudan marred Susanna Burkholder. Those children weft: Allred must Alfred manUna nd Lawson ow, a and nlia nd ideas. NOM Marklum, Fury Lover marciwl Abraham Hoover who Ahead wham Homer Tadd now View and Franchise Named chip - howl t urkhal They bad our mo. Harvey. Christian Bork - harder who married Outlook Hooser was me of IM Md pdm as He oaded on Lot 35, Comecon, 111. Pickering and bebnged to His Beeam Mennonite church, their childicn saw: North, Romroa and MivbeO. Noah married should, Barkin' of Mahhes, He served as a auLtt fed the wlawl br a number of years. He had rc a the hu farms M the kwon ip and was a Imd farmer. He kept computing in it repair- His children whoa Netim. Jamb, and lmnpat Jacob married Lulu Dimmer and [lead on the farm unfit his deutM1. He hod one sm, Grant no worked the tarot. Gnat had one child making He fiBM1 gercrinum of fresMldns on that farm. Tarin — John and Particle Teefy canes from Tipperary, Ireland, to OreenwaW In 1810 Jim was a mbhkr and smyeA at Goes- wwd Patrick cam Cwmd around 19M and bouslu Saturn fame mMrryr Those ndaugMma and o WJliam, who was she prangmeeHe carried Mary MCGiukev of AylmurL His dexcndenn still reside In Pickering+md are ashes in St Francis do Sults Church mganinlinm. Wax — Asher Willson and his wife cause No Fissuring in 1815. Asher Willson purchased a pan of let 22 ie 1832 and all of Lm 23 in F&M. TM luau may haw bttn and soon Asher Jr. A dtu luck. Angeline, win him in 16121 Casper 1814; Oliver O. m 181]; Joseph 1830; Other children were William; Hiram; Flilnk Comelim; Polly; Susan and Margaret Mn. Many of the dams given arwe game hour n¢ form noltea In the Brougham Certainly_ Carper Wham, HHI4-18881 a .tied Efrain Hubbard. (BI 1mboth lived 1821 to 18961. They hwa moa Lot, 20 aM RI, <'ono n', N pan. Gaper am the NV of Lot 21 in I843; Mon - am, money form ASMr, his father was SB Lamas; His Will is as hood, In 1896 u atom o Mart Fully, all oral the tat wort to ThadwardGrumman Dawson Wilson. Lia cart In entered 938 to Fndb Marie Gammon and will S Gammon Lot 30 plant menetl IM1u Cru Wilson; a par v' wnt by ♦ : palm 1/. or E?{. m m I, Willson; TM1eaurown oo Casper 2 and i N W: In Water form ro FVoll Dmoron Willson In 1682 and In 1986 m Water,, Gd, , 11856 The family: In I y It Mar ILe is , :'tied to Tuaws Chappel Colortheya f m of a us forms in The, riog any owned u fur of Ola, mi Lot 22 un tM1r endred an proud x' valuahlc spine tLiy IoM. . eleven and proud as if indiQcrt v Calan rust pro flown n goad pasmm as it appears I,,wgHothe PWluu Illy flown wur thea the of, an cfiiMmn. my to the mark Roods�M1wl, It n the 0 ma finished ur 1 aMmlo B it to this Jambi al the age 11 I2. loo :oomW Lmaa Marin OatrJay, youneea Jawfatw of 011 Bnrcl:ry of Lot 19 Cone 4. Wright - The Wixan familycroed in lweph Could', "Laan u d Time,', as huvinp well -on informed famous with mad Jr. ,hi in the I820s. They were the fire settlers of Claremont. said plain mcnt memi of the pool CM1meh Joshua Whon ell on Wt 18, Gu¢rxion IX, Wont 1901, and his Invetor Joseph leis n I.at 19, Gn n IX, about Ilse u Tinrs y "re pioneeof Ne northern part of R'ckcnnatownship and came from Suuben County, N.Y. TI¢y went of English do- n. their familiar, having came a ntnry fall (1699) to the State of Mashers uu', and later moved m Naw York At the time of ntm mining to Canada [hey were mean In the m e of rat. scroll. and Joshua of n a bay of six years Joseph Wixan took up land west of what I, mw in, Back Road and enaetl his home jam north of wlll the mad Minds to Ilse cast hetwral the village of Criminal and our Canadian Pact& Railway station. Later he Is sold to havevw res all the land on the west of the Brock amd from his home to the olphm coni A piece of hard *via of his, new the Mnchaanna farm. has occupied shortly after the coming of the elbonx be Abraham Townsend, a brother of Mrs. Joseph Wixom. Loop,: family of Tine were named as follows'. Randall, Town- wnq Juvph Elmd,fla Mary, Send, Lois and Clans. Joseph sen Ranson, a founder of the Baptist Church in Claremont, mmched with Manbetvs and was imprisoned in Bag land. Joshua Wixon with his wife, Rachel Fgglestin, sailed cast of the land taken up by his brother. His first home was womanish of where Ne Claremont Canadian Pacific Railway Station stands. Their family w m: Amos, Asa, Joel, Asher, Ruth (Mrs. Syl- ua Slwrrard), Bohn Joshua, Sulomn, Benjamin and Rachel (afterwards; Mrs. Mmes Really), Their daughter Ruth is believed as have Been the first child born of while rumors in die achieved half of he Lambda. Joshua Wilson was member of Council in 1851, add 311do, - ing the recovering period, did much to build up the beautiful ,arming community of Claremont. Wommea — A (Lily of this na tiPickering very In Pickerinvery Iran after if not before Be opening of the century. In a record of mages of Clarke township there is the following entry. 9dvhmy-first April, 1807. Marshall John Carr of Darlingness w Betsy WostlmR of Pickering with the w of her father. Present Mortis Carr and wife and Me Wml ufPs seen" One of the pmhmassrs appoimed at the town meeting held in 1811 are Haddam WondruR. In all probability the Three above numuthostriall our his si Another sister, Melinda, we, a Mrs. Jordan post and a thirdr. Mrs. Lbm Lyndc of Whitby Noadiah was born In Pennsylvania'ild I785 mad came to Pickering with the Friends ad lemma. His home Was in the ,,old concession on the Ramada mad (now Gtbeat'i rmidaom)_ It a abut that Na soldiers remark Western Tenoned and lainFtnn at the time of the war of 1812 were entertained It the home of Norther WevHmR In 1818 he PurcMSW 2M w,,, of Lal V, Can 11, for h250. His wife was Charity Powell and their family: Powell. Hawkins, Teams Harvey, Itimbseh, Notwo, lama, Henry. Lois and Charity. Powell Wootlrufi lived in premiums where be ken a ha Hawkins Naturally named Mary Tool and sealed on Justvern area IV, but Inter lived south along the Brock Iiwd in the 2nd Con, His ebmi er, seem EfaaMN, John, Jemima, Zellers Harvey, Inusha, National Mary Many Catherine Lois, Hawkins War me,me - Etine f Mrs. W fu Allaway) and Emmet Emslcy. ]slnhs Harvny Wmdmfi died when about twenty -sewn years of age, leaving a into, antl three cladven:, His widow afterwards married Smpber Quarter. 228 Elizabeth Wool mares! William Bentley Intl lined Intl died in Brougham. Nelson Wouch If Uvea in Brougham. He wv. a ma:Ibe, of ilm firm of Bentley and Woodruff. wimoIdled a pate memo factory for so m (Tree of his children — Wauhingtme Lafayette .nnie veUsed In n lo0$A James Woo lived far n [am, ontth, Boats RaluL bol late, auvea to Lpaon, wherehe Lca. Henry Womiinwet to m Lear ss wrt Gury, vaodr,ff (Mn. Kmlm) lomd n MnhamShe died a loos. APPyndix v HONOUR BOLL OF BROUGHAM. FIRSF WORLD WAR et RaluI Lufn Kat D,IL Jahn union. R11N. ek Clint, Mcohn. Arthihtltl Gtam MJmlm. p h�,ld pambu NR fim Anhm CxkneB John Chmbmne. Fusby, iRw, mvedu.a klin Roy M,Iwl,, m"t um CliffInd et Wnnnop. fildWilla,, dHa Ham Aln Cm111, m Falmhrop. J,hn emu Minn. Cul NWI PNu Mill Won1f. Evl Hilt[. HONOUR ROLL OF BROUGHAM rHE SECOND WORLD WAR. Dmu, E. mOdmm, 1. Month, John=, L Cm.fud. Rlbau We4u B. Kmx. KIRd umWms. FSW,,iok A U,dpon hour ssBwr C. RnBwn. Goldoni rvnel, B, Rnl Alto Colim , WOfam lana nm Garpe Knoo, Lloyd JIM,Follow, Ml Plnskd lo, F,IIn. Cnldwall U SPeppnN. Alden Wallop, rynl Awl. Evl Hilt[. qhs. Allm Millm But Ulu John moom GABON BWa. UIW. oLby. 0, Lymm n Any. woli" E M.o Peart, Baku rvme Shea. t0lloneni,.rua Gilowt Who'll, GmIt Whitney. Whitt D. r mel, Dmw,. who, A, Moots. [inrvbn Dunn. ROLL OF HONOUR CHERRYWOOO UNITED CHURCH M rc urn Bull Hmry Store IxmnySelphenson William Collor Ann,, n mpWa Welliall Gald Ginn Wood Albin MaymnN O,ul, Glnilne Anifl, Piny Homer Collim , RW folut 5n 1p Notion Jul, Word Alan Paryo Suuley B11L Loynd Po i Alm Orlin, Sly Rltay rzalµ Roney John 9'mpmn Al, Mummy Clare nn Udell ROLL OF HONOUR ST. PAUL'S CHURCH, DUNRARTON A N1,WWo rc urn Bull Hmry Store m W looklom Run untold A. Stroud MepinaldWol6 wrzrcu Lmta Ch End Wee dlt W.Jli" Flood Th"U rm C. Smith xaeen D11borl nrk F. MaFntlane M. Lildolard Sony funk I", Mllhmu, al ROLL OF HONOUR DUIDHARTON UNITED CHURCH WORLD WAR ONE. Drew A,,,.miih Rgrdd n With= Hamm whit. witow BxiWn @m VJliem B. Umber L S. Blmkm Me, fermi O'Lary Thm &N,11 ),he Fmxk Uala Ferret mterr,orc Wilber, Anne, • CM1wln Jmn Wm . C,nnugham Ifon�a rwom Bert Beakelt Wriol aln [ II 'lemmas Lpuambe WNfeMitchell xi AY lmo bony Emm udeimn C Sry4r C,rl Di,lwp D SrY,r 4 A Step.., M. %,, WAmm MallmY B. fartpM1 Mm".. D W. Dn en 0.aCm¢e n L Smh Bret Hadley Fred M11[heIl Kill) ROLL OF HONOUR DUNHARTON UNITED CHURCH WORLD WAR TWO. H- S. AUcww IN A K,Inp D C Lnk D. .Low H, A... R, 0, J we R. c InbSI D. ae�, 1. Log R. D. R.rcy F. W. MIS L sm.a. H. T. Scar we By, 1 ReMn Q. MmtooI m C R. Ruvm D. C , R. cwo 1. S. Nelmn n 5, Omp M. S, Polo FFiI1M G W. III 2 unrlr c v.v IXm K SIM F 9S.Xe1®nn A, 3111h N R AA..OI A. S mMo on S. GIIdN H'Io wov H Taylm M. GONon L Rod R. M.G tl uw �m o ntl CIlow, A. Hill %mRt III B. I.Humm Von. N N. FIWE LI CRlt' dul�m mx CBeRmo, naeldr 133 HONOUR ROLL FROM GREEN RIVER. FIRTT WORLD WAR. neds EpEal RIIMI. Ralph L Rural Pael"An. W Mian CFiImB. noll L H. R, WNn John IN, Hmreunion. 17177 Rawell Cum, IATA Bwuliuq w<iJmYy Lille) .bile winner of or In Oamony on knew VIA 191A, HONOUR ROLL OF SECOND WORLD WAR. mm rental Kill Donaon Toner HMen Cl. AliN, Ixt Cu.w Llory Buka Killed Game WNv, Anne, Kdoom. CrcY Poalilk Gempe Rielmnl,likom, Cape, Donald WIIIMnw CB Iq, Lehman. Eol WIIIIan'. Aunln 9hol June, Came, NkdhA,, Newlantl. sa amnm't. ub" w Ruefoo. Noemnn flukm DauOv Bartlm. Will hurt'. Time, Croninar. Sburl, HamW Attend Done,. w 1Weman. real D. Bull lww" Am rum, Tlwmn HONOUR ROLL OF GREENWWO World Wor One Wndd Wnr Two New. Chad. I n. door R. ,,Food A, Muo Ahem Carl h1wPnn IFM el W Atonal F" Rim or. lame Nunnll. Nvey AIGMw, Annus Pep. All AIMnAuo Ned EwL Milwn DINq. Rabe, Teimble. W ChnalphIr Pakt La n Wirral Guru, H. BAon. Aon Wall Ronald Sburl, HamW Sbon. Veno. Llm; Rv, A P. Wlitie tee (pIN) WllLio rum :N HONOUR ROLL OF KINSALE WrMd Wa, Ore World Ww Tmr m mune Bdl, AI4W KnHOY. Willem Ino WMelo bnnPe, P Cam"ak 1 e m Jir0. bmnJ,N. lbnmv Mo,hmy. HVB Gormley. AnBvr Peskin. IwepB Bert Rov • a Mall, M n RANe memo RM Rodpm Walrerr mc"I"Y. loan Fml Mminpey W. In Dakcaqa, Ro,MYak.lam kl )xm" C%'whwrJ %,,,..FNSlre N C "Roaem Sull. Garden a SWIL Hada PnronRnk" SOL Smlm Mon B mr Km W. R. Crame ' billet in xrunl Wep, Gamrr ROLL OF HONOUR ST. GEORGE'S CHURCH, PICKERING WORLD WAR TVG. Alu Allm armee Horth, l, m mune W v"w"J'3m Ino WMelo P. W. Fowl" Nommn Toald Harald Bodov mwm FLion Amain B BM C. Rnq'wm Waky Rake E. Cory Il I'm Bet" LkSJ C Godes Wemn Emr RaBry IaM Cmkt Maki, Pum Fml Mminpey W. In Dakcaqa, GMom Bmq )xm" C%'whwrJ Romid Green C "Roaem Fml Waim a 0.ontlJ AnlMny PnronRnk" Irak Taylor Mon B mr Km W. R. Crame Coll Bwne ea, Wwam Gmryo Bwm Eroat C. Raxluvl J. N'Md RW Eme Chm Haiyit Rr. Jf ROLL OF HONOUR SOOFH PICKERING WORLD WAR ONE. Wm WJwr AOw Wm, T, U. FrM lli L IMv M116" CJS\M A. Y W. T. MOCwthv M.M. O. 1. Urwel ss ,Mr L4ulik "y R. ?,.w y U� w C''", Wm SWfig, XIMIld H. HeMerwn WriFM Inm 11110m1 .II. IL Y'lo WORLD WAR TWO l AW W. MU lm G. C. Ww IMv M116" R. U. Sv4w W. T. MOCwthv M.M. O. 1. Urwel L1. NurpY A. C. DWv R. ?,.w A. W , GiWM W. U. WM L IMW F. WNwm Fmm J w ,w N 1I "k Wt n M,mg Vlllaw. 236 HONOUR ROLL OF WHITEVALE FIRR WORLD WAR W1M Ewu Ammer. Fml M im Llmd Whim. n Griflm. Orval Whim inkm. lama Centllc 0.1J Sell, KJIa6 FmI TNJJI. FL BAI. WaIUM SmIIR Gmr Emml brwn. ri m , Yoam Gmm0 tlmlb. H. W. bmI U"W MML ll,mo m kin Elm, Imill. iJ cmik"RmJull. ei'k Hnbnl. WaIUM SmIIR Hn4n KIIInF llim, L,mJ HalEw -" nY Kom. mlu^iJL', J ma Niilaoll itlg , wnn lO'Ek" J.4. NOU¢ GnRm, mina. aulJ Dom dffm AID Twm e. �u O 'l wihm Boo GmEw 237