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HomeMy WebLinkAbout789"Article taken from Kindred Spirits, page 3, Volume 15, Issue 4,Fall 1996, submitted by Eleanor Todd. To date, nothing is known of Ruth's early life beyond the fact that she was born in New York and married Samuel Munger there in 1795. When her second child, my great great grandmother Sarah Munger Ward, was four months old, the family left New York for Canada. They took the Lake Champlain route and arrived in Cobourg in February of 1799 where they petitioned for land in Hamilton Township. They didn't get it and moved on to Duffin's Creek. By November, Samuel had permission to lease Lot 16, Conc. 2. At that time, the creek was navigable right up to their doorstep and being one of the very few settlers along that stretch of Lake Ontario, it was inevitable that they would find themselves operating a tavern and a place for weary travellers to spend the night. Their homestead was also the scene of the first Town Meeting for the combined townships of Whitby and Pickering in 1801 or 1803 (depending on the source). Although Samuel is the one whose name appears in the history books, it's not hard to imagine who was doing most of the work in accommodating guests, and Ruth had several small children in tow at the time. But Ruth managed her own small bit of fame when a story about her appeared in the York Gazette, Aug. 10,1805: HEROIC ACTION OF AN UPPER CANADA WOMAN Mrs. Munger of Duffin's Creek, in the Township of Pitcairn, 23 miles from York, hearing her neighbor, Mrs. Woodruff, hollow out for help, immediately took down her husband's gun and ran to her assistance. When she arrived she was informed that a very large bear had taken off a sow into the bush; his route being shown to her, this heroine immediately pursued, and found the destroyer in the act of devouring the sow, upon which she rested her gun on a stump and shot Bruin through the head; on weighing the bear it proved to be the largest that had been killed in that township. Apparently, the Mungers had quit the tavern business by the time the soldiers were travelling back and forth between York and Kingston during the War of 1812-14, and it's easy to see why. The one doing all the work was no longer there. Ruth died on February 14,1813 at age 35, only five months after giving birth to her tenth child. Submitted by: Eleanor Todd p. 3"