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HomeMy WebLinkAboutX2023-013-052The way we were Old Post Inn c.1815 Built around 1815 by George Washington Post, this is the oldest building in Ajax. It was a stagecoach inn for travellers between Toronto and Kingston, with a black- smith shop and stable maintained on the property. The inn, at 367 Kingston Rd. E, was quarantined due to an outbreak of cholera in 1832 and by 1856 the stagecoach trade had started to decline quite rapidly due to the ad- vent of the Grand Trunk Railroad. Still standing today, it is located across the road from Picov Downs with much of the original stonework now covered by blue aluminum siding. Photos supplied by the Heritage Ajax Advisory Committee on behalf of the Ajax Community Archives. For more information about either, please call Brenda Kriz at 905-619-2529 ext. 343. �yv� C/ NJ iuuy ur l:uu a.m. with Rev. Stepneu ..rimer officiating. I rrr K elsyde Cemetery, Fergus. If d e may be madetoGroves Me rialC4my Hospital or the charity pWkh1�otuneral Home 51 FULLER, Ivan — At St, Mary's Hospital Kitchener, ON., on Wednesday, November 15, 20M. Formerly of Kelowna, BC, Toronto, Pickering, and recently of Beechwood Manor, Waterloo, ON., Ivan Fuller, age 81 years. Beloved husband of Elaine Fuller, for 55 years. Devoted father of Chelan Fuller of Waterloo, ON and Dwight Fuller of Las Vegas, NV. Father-in-law of Rob Hdlditch and grandfather of Alison Holditch and Heather Holditch allof Waterloo ON. The family will receive friends at the McEachnie Funeral Home,_ 28 Old Kingston Road, Aiax (Pickering Village) 905.4284488 from 7-9 P.M. Friday and 12 Noon till time of Funeral Service in the chapel on Saturday, November 18, 2000 at 1:30 p.m. Interment Erskine Cemetery. Should family and friends so desire, donations to the Heart and Stroke Foundation or t Society would be greatly Cancer c �Gae Rctv "THE BAY", story is dedicated to our Grand daucrhters : ALISON FULLER HOLDITCH and HEATHER FULLER HOLDITCH that they may know something of the lives and times of their ancestors. - PREFACE - "THE BAY" - This is an account of my mother's ancestors and their lives at "Frenchman's Bay". The Bay was of special interest to me. I do not recall the Elevators or Schooners, they had just gone before my time, but many people r knew at the Bay lived in that era. I came along in the summer cottage phase. I have to rely on stories, clippings, letters, and some people who had worked on schooners (like my grand- father, for one.) I want to thank the many who have given me information and pictures etc. Some are Helen Hedge, Effie Preston, Lorne White, Ruth Sparks, Joan Avis, Dave O'Brien, Helen Ryder, Winnie Boyes, Harold Scott, Doreen McLean, and Pearl Clar'.:. This story dwells mostly on the lake nav- gation, and those who worked it. This is a history on the way it was in the schooner times. A special thanks to my wife Elaine for editing and typing. "THE BAY" Written and compiled by, Ivan Fuller Kelowna, B.C. 1993. c5 44 /W-41'ao is 1 THE BAY The history of "The Bay" starts with the village of "Ganatsekwyagon", a Seneca Indian settlement close to the bay. To -day coming down the Bay road it would be hard to imagine that the first school, in what is now the Province of Ontario, would be started here over 320 years ago. There were many Indian villages at the mouth of creeks and rivers along the lake. The river gave shelter for the canoes, and were abundant with salmon, and the forests were full of every kind of game. By 1900 all the salmon had disappeared - victims of over -kill by the early settlers. It was from here that Joliet® the French Ex- plorer, and a French Fur Trader, known only as Pere, left for Lake Huron. Joliet was the explorer to map much of the region and also the Mississippi River. In 1669-70 Francios De Salignac De Fenlon came to the Bay ( Ganatsekwyagon ) to work among the Senecas' and start the first Mission School. Another Missionary was Trouve. They were Sulpician Missionaries. Count Denonville and troops stopped at Ganatsekwyagon in 1687 on his return from war with the Iroquois on the south shore of the lake. A great feast of deer and salmon were served to these guests. Ganatsekwyagon, (Frenchmans' Bay) was an ideal place for the village. The lake could be very rough and wild, but the bay would be calm and safe. The channel would not be cut through to the lake for another 175 years. Canoes were portaged across the narrow sand bar. Lily pads, reeds, fish, wild rice, berries and birds were plentiful. It was a tranquil spot, a jewel on the lake, backed by a pristine forest of white pines. There were Seneca villages at the mouth of Riviere Rouge, (Rouge River ), the Riviere au Salmon (Duffin's Creek), Les Grandes Ecores (Highland Creek) the St. John River (Humber River), and so on up and down the lake. Now all that remains of this domain of Louis the X1V, are two names, Rouc7e River and Frenchman's Bay. The Indians still had another century before their way of life would end. Canada changed from French to English rule in 1759. It is said, the Indians preferred the French to the English, because of the British authoritative manner. By 1795 a trickle of settlers started to arrive , some coming up from the States. In the 1820's immigrants started arriving from England, Ireland, and Scotland. The forests gave way to farms, the streams were dammed for power, and the Indian way was changed forever. col 2 THE BAY As the dawn of the 1800's broke over the region, the Indian ways of hunting, trapping, and living off the land, gave way to the settlers from the British Isles. They set out to exploit the abundance of raw materials. David Tripp and his five sons, John,Thomas, Edward, James, and Ira, settled near Frenchman's Bay in 1837. John built and operated one of the first saw -mills in the township. The Settlers started to clear the land. Pine forests gave way to grain growing. First they just worked around the stumps, and as time went on, stump pullers, and horses came into use. Most farmers had to be content with a yoke of oxen. They would take the best logs to York (Toronto) by schooner. Fort York was built with logs from��� Pickering via Duffins Creek. In 1820 Captain�7 Hadley built a schooner "The Duke of York" It �f sailed between York and Oswego, N.Y. The "Charlotte of Pickering", was built in 1834, by a Mr. William Quick. Both built at the mouth of D r� �e* - if Q (,( / Frenchman's Bay was a little lake of its owner with no opening into lake Ontario until 84 Win` Mr. Wm. Edwards and a Mr. Henderson, with a horse powered dredge, cut a channel through the Bar and turned Frenchman's Bay from pond to port. Most of the shipping would go via Frenchman's Bay from now on. This was the start of the Commercial Phase. With an outlet to the lake, an elevator was built at the north end of the bay. Warehouses were built, and farmers would bring their goods for shipment. This did not last long, when Pickering Harbour Co. built a 100,000 bushel elevator at the south end of the bay. Warehouses were opened up on the east side. Two piers were built out into the lake, with a lighthouse on the east pier. The piers were built with cribs of heavy timbers and filled with rocks, and decked with heavy planks. The light- house was unique. It was the only one on the lake with a green light. Schooners could now tie up, to wait their turn for loading or unloading. The elevator at the north end was torn down. The pilings still could be seen when I was young. My grand -father pointed them out to me. 3 The quaint village of Fairport sprang up, a few houses, post office, store, church, hotel, and of course, a tavern. Frenchman's Bay, Fairport, Pickering Harbour, or just "The BAy", all mean the same thing. One thing for sure, the village of Ganatsekwyagon has faded into the mists of time. Mr. J.H. McClellan was President of the 5y o Pickering Harbour Co. He came to the area in 1PA8. Dr. Wm. McGill was a major partner. The harbour got a substantial boost in 1875'f with a $7000 grant to expand. The light -house and a wharf were built. A year later they got Q �J3 an additional grant of $6000. A loan of $20,000- was taken out in 18= /47J(Things were now in full swing. The farmers bringing apples, barley, produce, logs, wood, lumber, and potash, to be shipped out, and coal, lime, plaster, building materials, glass, etc. were brought in. Huge ice houses were built. Ice cutting was extensive. Ice was used for cooling railway passenger cars, hotels, theatres, and in homes where they were fortunate enough to have ice boxes. Refrigeration had not yet arrived on the scene. SChooners could get $25.00 a load for saw -dust , from Toronto which was used to pack around the ice. Manure from livery barns, etc. was also brought back to Pickering Harbour, and sold to farmers. Liverpool was starting. A townsite had been laid out in 1855, and lots were being sold. It was thought that Liverpool would one day rival it's namesake in England. A hotel,bank,telegraph office and stores made up the little town. Mr. McClellan, President of Pickering Harbour lived there. Farmers lined up from Liverpool to the bay, with loads of barley, etc. for the U.S. breweries. All was GO ---Boom times for the area----. Two things then changed, and the elevator phase ended. The U.S. Congress imposed a duty on Canadian barley. Toronto did not need ice or cordwood by W.AT.1. Most of this had shut down. Coal was being used to heat homes, drive trains, and ships, which had previously been done by wood. The schooner fleet of the cord wood, ice, and barley trade, turned to stone, sand, and gravel. A shale rock called Dundas shale, could be hooked up from the bottom of the lake, put on little scows, then loaded by hand winch on to the schooners near by. This was taken to Toronto for building stones and paving. Concrete was not in wide use yet. 4 The chooners, also hauled sand and gravel from the bars and the shallow lake bottom. These schooners were called "Hookers" or "Stonehookers". Not many "Hookers" lasted into the 1920's. Concrete was now used. The last Hooker was burned in front of the C.N.E., as an attraction. It is hard to believe that thinking men would burn for fun the last schooner on the lake. No thought for to -morrow. At one time , thousands of schooners graced the lake. The name of the last schooner on lake Ontario was the "Lyman M. Davis", Burned June 29, 1934. ---A National Tragedy ---. The burning of schooners was commonplace through the years, at Sunnyside, C.N.E. and off Oshawa Park, etc. ere! The Schooner "Lyman M. Davis" at Toronto Exhibition break -water. She had wintered in Kingston, and under her own sail came to Toronto. She would have had many more useful years, but steam and larger vessels made her obsolete. -- sad --. Photo - May 29, 1934. THE BAY The name "THE BAY" for me, had a touch of magic! It was a different world once you got south of the Base line or the C.N.R. tracks. This was before any 401 highway or businesses on the Liverpool road. The bridge over the C.N.R. tracks had a special sound. The deck was made of heavy planks, not bolted down. As you crossed the bridge, a loud rumble occurred, that could be heard a mile or so away. The planks were loose so as to shake the dirt and grit off, thus stopping rot. The bridge has long since gone, replaced by a concrete one. After crossing the bridge and starting to- ward the "Bay", on the left were beautiful farms on the right , one could see the Bay. The air was always a little cooler, with a breeze from the lake. Sail boats dotted the glistening Bay. Power boats had not arrived yet to spoil the peace and tranquillity. An orchard, a farm house, then a quaint little church, the "Friend's Meeting House", with a cemetery in the back, where my grand parents great grand -mother, uncles and aunts, sleep. A dozen or so other graves are also there, the Mansfield's,the Stoner's, the Scott's, etc. all one time friends and neighbours. After the little church, you came to Tom Sowerby's ice house, then you make a turn on to Commerce Street and my pulse would quicken, because my grand- father O'Brien lived at the foot of this street. All the houses then, were mostly summer places. Cottages with pickets fences, and neatly trimmed little lawns. These were mainly empty in the winter, only a dozen or so families lived here in the winter. This was the phase of the Bay I knew. The Bay went through many phases. First the Indian and French, thus Frenchman's Bay, then earlv white settlers,, then an attempt to make it a port, then a centre of Commerce, which gave way to camping on the sand bars, followed by cottages and summer resorts. In my time, it really was magic. My grand -father and step grand -mother, who we affectionately called Aunt May, had a neat little tea room. They served light lunches, pop and ice cream. They had five tables, two in the inside , and three on the veranda. They called it "Bay View Inn". Across the street, the Scott's had a booth, much the same, with picnic tables, also a boat house with row boats to rent. It was called the "Blue Line Inn". A My uncle John O'Brien, also had a boat house it was north of the "Bay View Inn". He rented boats and sold bait, etc. On Commerce Street, a few doors from the bay, was Mansfield's store, post office, and grocery. Down Liverpool road.was Glen Avis Park and dance pavilion. They had good dances that were strictly ran, no liquor, or doubtful characters allowed,Two other dance halls were Mansfield's and a dance hall owned by Mr. E.N. Croker. Dancing was a popular pastime, and every resort had more than one dance hall. People from Toronto, spent pleasant summer holidays at Frenchman's Bay. Most families stayed all summer. The bread winner coming out on the week -ends. There was a station at Dunbarton, a short pleasant walk brought you to the bay. It was a great summer place. Many visitors came to the Bay. This phase started with people camping on the sand bars, then later building cottages. It was about 1902 when summer people started coming out to the Bay. It was only twenty miles from Toronto. Most came by rail. With the war coming in 1939, it ended that phase. That is my fondest memory of my growing years. It chokes me up now just to see the place. Gone are all the neat cottages. Gone is Bay View Inn. Gone is the Blue Line Inn. Gone are almost all of my kinfolk: Gone is the quiet quaint village of Fairport. Replaced by sub-divisions,nuclear plants, noise from cars and power boats. Nothing remains static but for me, this is not the Bay I knew and loved. Even gone is the little church. New comers who had no attachment to the Bay, thought best to tear it down. This building had over 125 years of history ! _ So much for heritage sites. _ N My Great, great, Grand -father, Salisbury Wright was born in 1814 in Yorkshire, England. After a very long ocean trip to Canada (Sailing ships could take 6-10 weeks to cross the Atlantic), he came to 3�e Rsu�e.e-River-a-rea,- later movedo Frenchman's Bay. He had four children, Hannah, (my great Grand- mother) William, Mrs. McCourt, and "Marme" (Mrs. Wm. Appleton). Appleton's owned the schooners "Goodnews" and the "Maud". They later moved to Toronto, and William had charge of the Leuty Street Life saving sub -station. They had no children. William had three children, one son William, two daughters, Violet (Vi) and Tish. They married two brothers, Will and Jack Guthrie. Salisbury Wright died at his daughter and Bon- in -law, Capt. William McCourt's residence Feb. 11,1906. SALISBURY WRIGHT'S death notice and funeral in- formation This was common in these times. They were posted in the shops, stores, and in prominent places that could be seen by all. 0 THE O'BRIEN'S (Taken from the marriage certificate of Matthew O'Brien and Hannah Wright.) The marriage of Mr. Matthew O'Brien, Dunbarton, Canada West, -sailor- age 22, born in Ireland - 1847, and Miss Hannah Wright of Dunbarton, Canada West, - age 19, born in Dunbarton, Canada West, in 1850. Married by Pastor George R. Davis, at Fort Gratiot St.Clair County, Michigan, U.S.A. on Dec. 22, 1869. Witness - Mr James Button. - Mr Abner Palmer, of Fort Gratiot. Fort Gratiot, St. Clair County, Michigan was built in 1814. It was named for the engineer in charge, Capt. Charles Gratiot. Fort Gratiot is now part of the city of Port Huron , Michigan. Matthew and Hannah were my Great Grand Parents. Matthew's rather was a deep-sea mariner. Matthew and Hannah had four children. (,WILLIAM O'BRIEN (My Grand -father)- born Nov.20, 1870 - died Nov.16, 1943. ?-AMELIA O'BRIEN born 1879 - died 1890, age ll,. a tragic death. She swallowed an open safety - pin , while playing. ANNIE O'BRIEN - born Aug. 27, 1882. Died Feb. 2,1959. - buried in Wynyard, Sask. i4TOHN O'BRIEN, born 1886. - died 1959, as the results of a car accident on Highway 401. Matthew and Hannah lived all their lives at Fairport on Frenchman's Bay. Matthew worked as a sailor and was the;---f ho '. ur. . The light -use was built in the �188's. Matthew bought a schooner called the "MADELINE" she was built in Bronte, Ont. by Mr. Lem Dorland. It was used in the barley trade, taking barley, apples, lumber, etc. to U.S. ports, mainly, Oswego, N.Y.. Oswego was on the Erie Canal System, to the Hudson River and New York, City. He brought back cargoes of salt, cement, coal Plaster, and general merchandise. Two men could handle the schooner, but usually there were three. It was hard work as they had no power winches. In rough sea all had to be alert. The "Madeline" was 3 long, with a 210'"„ beam and could carry 100 tons. �f 47 �� iI �7 10 Matthew O'Brien died Feb. 1, 1904, age 56, buried in the R.C. Cemetery in Pickering, Ont. The Madeline was sold to Steve Peer of Port Credit and was used in the stone,sand, and gravel trade. 1916 was her last year. She sank in the mouth of the Credit River in 1919 or 1920, and was blown up by Steve Peer, as the department of trans- port claimed it was a hazard to navigation. My Great Grandmother, Hannah O'Brien, lived in her home at Fairport, until . her death in Oct. W_1 1938, age 88. She is buried in The Friends burying Ground, Fairport. Great Grandmother was a joy to have known. I was 19 when she passed away. I always enjoyed talk- ing to her. She had lots of stories to tell of the old Bay, which I should have taken note of. I would have to sit on her left side, the side with the good ear. We would have tea and cookies, and she always called me "Ivy". She was born near the Rouge Rivera. in 1850. re6 Y a y . ..L.. GREAT GRAND -MOTHER, HANNAH O'OBRIEN - at the front gate of her home - Circa 1928 -. Matthew and Hannah bought a lot and had a house built on it in 18720 The house was added to over the years. Stories have it, they lived in the Sowerby house for two years before their house was built. Matthew O'Brien and a Mr. Brumage owned the "Mary Ann", a scow Schooner and was reported doing business at Frenchman's Bay in 1882. This was the year the Madeline was built. The "Mary Ann" was built before 1855, and she survived the Port Credit fire of 1855, also the Esplanade fire of 1885. Not much else is known of her. SCHOONER RIGGING OF A TWO MASTED SCHOONER 1. MAIN SAIL 2. FORE SAIL 3. MAIN GAFF TOP SAIL 4. FORE'GAFF TOP SAIL 5. FORE STAY SAIL 6. INNER JIB 7. FLYING JIB OR OUTER JIB. The term toise ( Fr. ) was used in the stone, sand, and gravel trade. 100 tons = 10 toise. (pronounced "tyce"). 6xl2x3 ft. of stone = 216 cubic ft. or 1 toise (10 ton). The Madeline could carry 10 toise. Water Depth - (1 fathom = 6 ft.). 11 "THE TRIP TO THE QUEEN CITY" On a pleasant summer day in 1887, Matthew O'Brien ( my great grand -father ) had a cargo of grain to take to the Queen City. "Willie", my grand -father, a lad of 17 , for a deck-hand,two people could handle the Madeline in good weather. It was planned to take the family along, Uncle John a tot, Aunt Amelia a girl of 8 yearn my aunt Annie a girl of 5, and my great grand- mother Hannah O'Brien 37 years of age. The young family left Frenchman's Bay for Toronto, having packed supplies for a couple of days. It was not uncommon for a skipper to take along family members. As they left the bay light -house astern, and headed west, the children's thoughts were of visiting and sight-seeing, while the cargo was being dis- charged. This may take many hours, depending on how long the line-up of schooners were. When they neared Scarborough, the wind fresh- ened, and the cloud in the west started to look ominous. The Madeline was a good ship and under capable hands. Capt. O'Brien was a life long sailor, first on salt and now fresh water. The Madeline was built in 1882, in Bronte, by Lem Dorland, and was in new condition. As they made for the Queen City gap, the vessel started to pitch and roll, and waves started to wash over the deck. The children, Amelia, Annie, and little John were put in the cabin, as it was feared they would be washed over board. They became terrified. My great grand -father and grand -father had all they could do to keep her under control. My great grand -mother worked the pumps, as they were taking on water. The children locked in the cabin, must have had nightmares for months. The two older children never forgot. Finally the light of the eastern gap, and the safety of Toronto Bay and Queen's Wharf. They were lucky not to have ended up like Capt. Edwards, 17 years before , with loss of life and a lost schooner. I don't think my great grand -father was concerned about landing on beam ends. His concern was for the children and the danger of being lost over board. But with my great grand -mother on the pumps, great grand- dad, and grand -father, keeping her deck side up. A happy ending for all. Aunt Annie (Sparks) O'Brien never forgot the terror she experienced on that trip!. SA Mae- Ah 13 THE BAY WILLIAM O'BRIEN --- was born Nov. 20, 1870, at Frenchman's Bay. Married ATHELIA JANE SPARKS born Oct. 28, 1872, at Whitby, Ont. They were married Sept. 2, 1890. William and Athelia O'Brien were my grand- parents. They bought a house and lot (4 acre) Block E. Lot 23, from George St. John Gwatkin for $100 on May 6, 1892. This was for house and lot. Wm. O'Brien lived here for the rest of his life. My grand -father is listed as a sailor in the deed. The place was owned by Daniel and Elizabeth Marks of Toronto. They sold it to George Gwatkin of Toronto for one dollar, on the first day of Sept. 1891. Mr. and Mrs. Marks were the parents of Mrs. Thomas Mansfield Sr. The earliest records of the Lot being regist ered in the county of York (now Ontario county) was in 1848. Feb. 9, 1857, Mr. Stephen Gardner sold it to Daniel Marks for 20 pounds. WILLIAM AND ATHELIA had two daughters; May Madeline (my mother), born Nov.8, 1893 Died Jan. 5, 1942. Interred in Erskine Cemetery, Pickering. She was named fo the schooner "Madeline". Grace Amelia born Sept.j0898. Died Dec. 29, 1928. Interred Friends Bur . Ground, Frenchman's Bay, Jan. 1, 1929. ,ac-�� / ,cl William worked on the lake with his father Matthew, following the sea -faring tradition of the O'Briens. They had many experiences to relate. One being - The Trip To The Queen City. as told earlier. In 1906 Athelia, my grand-mother,died at the yc�lan.q age of 33 years. She was interred in the Friends Burying Ground, Frenchman's Bay, Wed. Jan. 24,1906. William was a widower with two daughters Grace 8 years, and May 13. Annie O'Brien, a sister Of William, helped raise the girls until she married William Joseph Sparks on Aug. 28, 1911. She was a great help to my grand -father. W. J. Sparks was a brother to Athelia.? My mother and great grand -mother looked out for Grace until my mother (age 20), married my father, Reginald Fuller on Aug. 27, 1913. William O'Brien was the last light -house keeper at the Bay. He started commercial fishing after schooner days were over. He and his brother had a fishing boat, and for a time, white fish were the main catch. They had 2 or 3 large drying reels for the nets, then the nets were put on smaller reels for taking back to the lake. My aunt Grace used to mend the nets as they were slowly wound off. 14 I can recall the squeak of the big drying reels. The fish were packed in ice and shipped to Toronto, by train. It was a good business until the Lamprey SA got into the lakes. Now, all the commercial fishing is a thing of the past. Every lake port had a commercial fleet. The O'Briens gave up fishing before the Lamprey, and sold the boat, nets, and equipment to Gordon Brown, Toronto, 1935-6. John built a boat house and was engaged in building and renting boats. In 1920 my grand -father met Marion Melton. She worked for the Robert Simpson Co. Ltd. Toronto, in the confectionery circle. They were married March 28, 1921, by Edward Morley' rector of St. PAul's Church, West Toronto. Witnesses were Helen and Herbert Wells. Marion was born in Scarborough County, York, England, Aug.7, 1892. She was 22 years my grand - father's junior. She was affectionately known as "Aunt May". She was important to me. She took me many places , my first train ride, my first Santa Claus Parade, and fussed over me like a grand -mother. William and May O'Brien built the tea room, Bay view Inn, in 1924. It was a success. My Aunt May was very much a Go -Getter. In summer she served breakfast to fishermen out from Toronto, she also served light lunches all day, ice cream, sundaes, sodas, milk shakes, Banana splits were the special. They also sold candy, pop, ice cream cones,cigarettes, milk, etc. No groceries at this time. Her sister-in-law Agnes, Mrs. J. O'Brien helped on busy week -ends. The milk came from Oswald (Pete) Hilts's farm, located at the south end of Liverpool road on the east side, and ran right to the lake. "Hilts" was an old name at the Bay. John Hilts owned this farm in the 1870's. My grand -father had two covered milk pails, and every evening, he would walk to Hilts' farm (about a mile) and carry back the milk ---a gallon in each pail. Every morning, between 7;30 - 8 a.m. Pete would bring a large can of milk, in a 1920 model T. Ford. It was a closed car with disc wheels. You could hear it coming from when he left the farm. My grand -father was kept busy keeping the POP cold, the ice cream frozen, and helping with the dishes. The pop was kept in a long metal lined wooden box, with chopped ice packed around the bottles. As the ice melted, the water would run out through a hole in the floor. The ice cream had to be packed in layers of ice and rock salt to keep it frozen. They also had big ice boxes for the food. They had their own ice house 15 and filled it with ice, cut from the Bay in winter. This was before electric refrigeration. All went fine until 1939 - WAR - . The world changed. The Bay would never be a summer resort again. Gasoline was put on ration. Men and women joined the Services. A shell filling plant was built in Ajax. Workers needed places to live. Cottages were winterized (sort -of), the day of the nice neat cottage was gone. Grand -dad died in Nov.1943, and is buried in The Friends Burying Ground , Frenchman's Bay -A real friend of mine -. My Aunt May changed the Tea Room and ice cream parlor into a store. She also had the Post Office in the summer. Thomas Mansfield had previously had the Post Office with his store before it closed. Aunt May kept the Post Office for a few years, and then retired. She passed away July 5, 1985, and is buried in The Friends Burying Ground in French - mans' Bay. LEFT - Mrs. Willi~.;a ( May ) O'Brin RIGHT - Mrs John ( Agnes ) O'Brien SOL NE CO., INC. is IN LIP N. Y. Mr. William O'Brien Pickering Harbor, Ont. As late as 1936, requests for white fish were coming in from New York. But alas, progress had seen to it, the lake fishing was over. Picture - My Grand -father standing in the bow of the boat, my Uncle John O'Brien, fore ground pulling in the nets. Note the white fish. Picture taken by Gracie O'Brien (my aunt). Circa 1923. j Fairport. 16 ( 1),ain `iattheNv 013t-icu, one 'W01-thiest citirells passed :,1(,::�l,l�- a Friends Mourn I Oit (\ eni:tg :after t-ei'N: -llcl-t 1111t1 railif111 Miler`. �Trs. �T O"Brien Ili �\::s ill good ilealth un to= • 1'111Ir-dad c\c r:inK last, -)tell Ile /y �_-_, _ \\ as seized \\•ith the fatill disease. Rouge =River Native Was; (_'al)t. O' iBiel] had foHowed the of�Flowers \ uciltiull c;f in ni iner up to thresC he retl l-ed f r01n t.Z`,-- ' rrulWn ma's Bay, Oct 27 (Specials yell l-S ilgo, \\-hell !4:lilllljr and hrid dial'_' Of Nile =9.'`.VyLlathew- O'Brieh, who had re- sided, -in this districtallher life, li};l:t-)louse at this pul.t. IIe \\'a` was'liuried from her.6ome" with a large number of relatives and friends. ;t lc)\'lit S * hl1SiT1U(1 alld faLllel', Of !l i..:. in attendance. 0rr,-. : Rouge/ kindly alid genial disj)ositi011 Mrs. O'Brierilfyvas born at 'her• \\" 111C1] tl]:tdC 1111I] )0 tllal' �\ 1L11 llll l River district in 1850, where father settled after his -long. trip from with R-110I,1 lie nssuciated. Ile Yorkshire, England, later moving to !oave� a t\vo soil`; 11I1d a Fre0.chman's Bak. Mrs. O'Brien was well known as a tl;tt:hlttC't'. 1i slid part of tlli_� ifluens of his lover. Zlowers. Her house ,was al y ed a .as-, - affilir IS the se:.iolis IO\V _with- ,large Sb • en�i`' 1 "bths, while' she greNV. s _ )tt, "'1111a111, \\-110 is vel-Y ma her own - garden,: \\ iLll 1)i:elltll:)1lI;L at his O\\'tl 11UIlle She.r��-in fancy need) anil \'.•as llllable t0 see his fathel' w - ,�"•`�-" 1M.•� She Is by one d8�ghter, lifter }le Ivas ttlkell ill. His fuller. 1 D4rl:AfsOie Sparks, Wynward.'-ward..* ie Sparks, ill tuck place on Thill'sday to tile' two sons. William and John. Fiocft-! --Wm.. ft. L. Celtletet'y, Pickcril)g, alld ma 's.Ba�no: one brother, i \ells Ill.-gely attended. Matthew -O'BrrieN , my Great Grand -father, was a member of the Doric Lodge # 424, chartered in 1890. He was a Roman Catholic. It is rare for a Catholic to be a Mason. I have his Masonic pin. ..... DIED ..... ' , { :1� I�nirlun 1, nn Jlunila� , I',•Imuarc 1�;, 14� �4, {� 1 - Mattliew O'Brien, •�- Aged 56 Nears. On the morning of Feb.lst, 1904, my grandpa O'Brien was very ill. He did not know that his father was very sick. He said he could hear harnesses clink- ing and sleigh runners squeaking in the snow. A hour or so they started to go back past his house. He was not told it was his father's funeral. Bells were removed from harnesses for funerals. 16 A MARRIED MATTHEW O'BRIEN 1869 1847 - 1904 WM. O'BRIEN - M - 1870 - 1943 1890 MAY O'BRIEN - M - 1893 - 1942 1913 HANNAH WRIGHT 1850 -1938 ATHELIA SPARKS 1872 - 1906 REGINALD FULLER 1889 - 1977 v - IVAN FULLER - M - ELAINE BAUM 1919 - 1945 1920 - CHELAN FULLER - M - ROBERT HOLDITCH 1955 - 1980 1951 - ALISON FULLER HOLDITCH 1985 - HEATHER FULLER HOLDITCH 1987 - DWIGHT FULLER 1959 - 17 9 44 PI 11 LA TOP Blue Line Inn. &,A-ZZ-, CENTRE - Thomas Manfield's old store -* /- -7 BOTTOM - Mrs. Balsdon and Helen Scott as a baby. BACKGROUND - Wm..O'Brien's house, Mansfield's house, far right - Thomas Mansfield's old store. Circa - 1919. 0 �: �•,'y�•`� .`M iril�� �•1 icy;'• r, • _ 144 t�� 4w :%6k, CL �fluttti� Hil%������ i s ..'Y.••Y _ 1ti _ 1 � � - • - is � � 1�' ta. ���' tRi►�'�h�?�`r � 'ti��• fly •.�;'';1.; "' 11 l� ,�:y+tom k "•Mr. TWAA low tk yy s e t • , � •' � A� •tom � �•� �. 19 THE BAY CHURCH The little Church at the Bay was a frame building, with 3 windows on each side. The door faced Liverpool R'd. (sometime called the Bay R'd., at one time called Queen St.). The church was very plain, as all Quaker buildings are. Out behind was an open -front shed to put horses in during the services. When I was a small boy we put our horse in the shed on New Years Day, while we had a day at Grandpa O'Brien's. Horse and cutter was used when the roads were snow -bound. It is not known when the church was built, but it is known, the land was granted to Capt. George Hill in May 1796, and sold to David Gardner in 1847. David Gardner sold what is now the cemetery, to the Bible Chiistian Church for ten pounds. This land was to be a Burying Ground and a site for a church. My Great Grand -father W.W. Sparks was a Lay Preacher and Superintendent of the Sunday School. Thomas Mansfield Sr. was a Sunday School teacher. This was after 1875. No records of the graves were kept before the 19401s. Many Graves are unmarked. My Grand- dad told me, there are Veterans from the war of 1812-1814 buried there. Three Veterans of the 1812-1814 war, from the Bay area buried there are Abraham Stoner, Peter Stoner, and John Palmer. The Stoners lived at the Bay and were engaged in Lake Navigation. John Palmer lived on Lot 22, Baseline and Liverpool R'd. When I was a child, church services were held in the summer only. Mrs. John (Agnes) O'Brien played the organ for many years. Student Ministers and Lay Preachers took the services. Not so, in Pickering Harbour days, the church was used the year around. The little white "Friends Church" (Quaker) was demolished in 1984. vi�- 20 THE BAY From the "Pickering News", December 16, 1887. PICKERING HARBOR SABBATH SCHOOL. An entertainment will.be given by the scholars of Pickering Harbor Sunday School, on Tuesday December 20th, to consist of readings, recitations and singing by the school, and addresses by prom- inent speakers. A special feature during the evening will be the unloading of the Christmas Ship "Glad Tidings", of her full cargo of presents for young and old. Refreshments provided for the children. A cordial invitation is extended to all. Come and help us spend the evening. Admission 154!. Doors open at 7 P.M. P.J. Wright, Treas. T. Mansfield, Sec. W.W. Sparks, Supt. From the "Pickering News", December 30th, 1887. The Christmas Boat, held by the Friends Sunday School at the Harbor Church on Tuesday 19,inst. was quite a success. the program was extensive and varied. A very interesting part of the even- ing's proceedings was the distribution of the presents taken from the boat. The report of the secretary showed that the school was in a healthy state, financially and otherwise. A considerable sum was realized at the door. 21 THE BAY 1 SCHOOL Base Line School S.S. # 2 was on the South East corner of Base Line and Brock R'd. It was built in 1852. It was almost two miles from Fairport village to the school. A long way to walk, even in summer. It was a one room school, one teacher for all grades. Most stopped going by grade 6 or 7. Few went on to high school, because of dist- ance. Education was as good as any to -day. Before this, the school was at Kingston R'd. and Brock R'd., an impossible distance. A Centennial was held June 26, 1954. The school was 102 years old. My Mother, Grand -father and all Bay children went to this school. ,50u % If _5 JD� a F - Base -line School - building as it looked in the 1940's. Note the Elm trees - gone too - dutch elm disease - as all in Ontario have gone. THE BAY From - The Pickering News - July 3, 1896. Report of Exams S.S. no. 2. Sr. 1st. - Morley Sleep, Geo. Hilts, John O'Brien Jr. 2nd. - Etta Hadley, Tom Gormley, 011ie Edt;,,ards. Sr. 2nd. - Frank Sparks, Emma Mansfield, A. Hilts. Jr. 3rd. - Geo. Burell, Martha Mansfield, V. Wright. Sr. 3rd. - Lizzie Walsh, Albert Sparks, Chas. Shepherd.. Sr. 4th. - Annie O'Brien, Arthur Leng, Eva Hilts. BASE - LINE SCHOOL Circa - 1900. Back Row - Tom Gormley 5th. from thr right, John O'Brien 6th from the right. Centre Rote* - Allegra Sparks first on the right. - May O'Brien second from the right. - Sadie Sparks third from the right. -,� .��-�' � tom? �-•`r ���" 4,1 23 Athelia O'Brien, May O'Brien, and Grace O'Brien - baby. ( My Grand- mother, mother, and aunt ). William O'Brien Age - 19. William O'Brien Age - 68 I 24 t c MAY MADELINE O'BRIEN - 1893 - 1942. My mother - age 4. 25 a Verna and Ivan Fuller only grand children of Wm. and Athelia O'Brien. Grace O'Brien and Marjorie Mansfield. Neighbours at the Bay. Annie O'Brien - 1st. cousin of Wm. O'Brien. WM- Wright - brother of Hannah O'Brien,- Agnes O'Brien. , 26 I TuPi The Light -house and East Pier near the end of its days. 1923-5. Bottom The Pier and light -house in mid -winter. Pier piled high with ice r..:" k a i it R{{ ,,.ka: • '� . ~ 27 THE BAY Ice cutting was a big part of winter activ- ities at the bay. There were large ice houses just north of the elevators. Electric refrig- eration was not known at this time. Ice was used for cooling in homes, hotels, theaters, railway passenger cars, etc. Very few steamers came into the Bay. One was Joe Goodwin's tug, which towed empty ice barges from Toronto every a.m.-and back loaded with ice every night. The pictures on this page are not at the Bay, but the operation is the same. An ice plow pulled by a horse would mark off a field. First going one way , then the other, like a checker board. The cut would be 3-4 inches deep. (the ice would be 18-24 inches thick. The plow was like a saw blade , Near the shore they would break up an area and with a fork like tool, they would snap off the blocks, with aid of pike poles they would guide the blocks to the ice house, an endless chain would lift them up and down a shoot into place in the ice house. Saw dust would be packed all around the blocks, and next summer, off to Toronto. w A5 The O'Brien ice utting equipment ,�,o in the Museum in Greenwood. SEE PICTURES NEXT PAGE. 28 ICE CUTTING The ice is marled off into squares, an ice cutter is run through, the blocks are pushed on an endless chain and carried to the ice house. Top - Frank Fletcher & John O'Brien guiding blocks of ice to the ice ladder. This is not the Lake Simcoe operation, but for private ice houses— (Mansfields, O'Briens and Avis, Centre - Two old timers from The Bay, Charlie Mansfield and my Grand -dad William O'Brien. Bottom - Cutting ice the hard Grandpa O'Brien pulling and Charlie Mansfield pushing the ice plough. In the "Hey Daym,horses pulled the plough. At the end of the ice era, Walter Avis developed a po- wer saw, but it was in the mid- f0p thirty's and _,44 o the demand for i ( was ending. )r �:4H < o a' Di n �� T t Om(D o �o r 1-1 (D Z (D "(D a O G9 n (P (D W H. Eg cr ct r� n1 (MD ik •�. rW O .`s (v (L O O F' x ct (D r 'R M ,`3' Q' O (D 1a. 34 (D �A (D 00 Ci r • •ham' •�-� � � � n' • /m\ /1 T�[ ' • i� a � CL j N cn :i t • ct' N �� .F � its? 0 :y 0 (D n . _ a pi n u tt 'C O (D Oto M r l Nil 0 • •[ .% w A r lLZ UI �o a ,4 4 `tom OR �'y 28.C. Old -Dobbin Loses Job Motor Cuts Ice Blocks Frenchman's Bay, Jan. 16.—Vision- Ing torrid midsummer days, resi- dents of Frenchman's Bay are busily I hauling in their annual harvest of 'ice from the frozen surface of the bay and storing it for use when butter floats in its own fat and .milk goes sour through the efforts of ;King Sol. Horses, used for gen- erations to cut and. transport the huge blocks, were no longer in evi- dence when The Star visited the scene, the industry having become j mechanized. For the first time in the history of ice -cutting on the bay, a motor driven saw, developed by Walter Avis, Frenchman's Bay, in his spare time, is being used to gouge huge chunks off the solid surface of the water..•. .The cutter, which is pushed by hand; cuts two lines through the ice to a depth of 9% inches. By crossing the first cuts made, the ice blocks are clearly marked out and one blow of a slicing bar is suf- ficient to separate the 200-pound blocks. These are floated to an in- clined ramp where an endless belt, driven by a one -cylinder motor, hoists them to the. loading platform on the level of truck platforms. Utilizing a four -cylinder motor from a discarded automobile, Mr. Avis mounted a thirty -inch cir- cular saw on each end of the short- ened rear axle and put the ap- paratus on skids. The result was an effective labor-saving ice -cutter. "It was just an experiment," Mr. Avis told The Star. "I find that it'. will cut as much ice as men can using three or four horses. It ..can keep four or five trucks busy haul- ing ice all day." E t _ FRENCHMA.N'S BAY ICE CUTTERS REPLACE HORSES WITH HORSE -POWER Ice -cutting is under way in old automobile, a power -driven ice- guiding the 200-pound blocks of ice Frenchman's Bay, but Old Dobbin, cutter has beea developed by AVal- to the endless chain which hoists who for many years supplied the ter Avis, Frenchman's Bay, which them to the loading platform for does the work of several horses. transfer to trucks; (3) Walter Avis, .motive power, is now among the Working oa ice 14 inches thick, resi- operating the ice -cutter he built, unemployed, modern mechanization dents of the community are busy The cutter has two 30-inch circular of the industry having driven him harvesting h supply for the summer. saws and can cut ice fast enough into retirement. Manufactured out (1) Dick Avis, 9, is shown busy to keep four or five trucks busy of the motor and drive shaft of an with a handsaw; (2) Men at work hauling it away. 29 f � y 6wAT�r'�' i �' Bf eol W?Ki Ik M TOP -- Grand-dad's home, with the Mansfield's house in the rear. Mansfield's house was built by Thomas Mansfield Sr. Later occupied by Chas. Mansfield. REF INN `' ,;: �. .s 17, �.ti '�'�..t '�P _`. �L'. �''F r''c. ki r1�ia� "�I� r �ik' � � (�,. ''� �•'"�. � I +'4fi t 1 Cy' �' s i • . ' '% v,`;�FeL ` . v' .'1J �'.ec '~" '•4 t'� w �]c j'�r 'G ['�'_ i'�h.`ryiR1N.Cd Awe. .. �_�_ ,>.alQ1�.!.r /3. ��a�r ... aL'�i"i; IF%4.. _..�y�`.�t.>h."4II><'.. -r� . •.�� ttr.�:.i Jss Flo N % AD BOTTOM -- The Tea Room and Ice Cream Parlor. "THE BAY VIEW INN". Built - 1924. Front St., Frenchman's Bay, Ont. r Raa _ ,44 D$ F M-14.; [EN74af-N x '�itff 30 LAZY SUMMER'S DAY Frenchman's Bay In 1936 offered a peaceful refuge subdivisions and stores of Bay Ridges, although a few from the city, with its tree -shaded roads and quiet of the older houses still stand. The wide bay, with its streets. Today, Frenchman's Bay is surrounded by the narrow harbour, is a popular spot with boaters. TOP - A post card -1936 - Tells it all - BOTTOM - Left Bay View Inn, behind - O'Brien's house, next Mansfield's house, back - Mansfield's new store. Right - Blue Line Inn, operated by Fred and Marj1mo Scott. C�7\ The car is a 1931 model. ay—?1,�a 31 May Fuller Ivan Fuller ( 0' Brien ) and 1919. 3 32 . THE BAY PARTIAL LIST OF SCHOONERS THAT CALLED PICKERING HARBOUR HOME. NORTH WEST owned by Hilts, sold to Gold rings, Whitby. MAUD owned by Appleton. MAPLE LEAF 11T. Mansfield. MADELINE Matt O'Brien. GOOD NEWS Wm. Appleton. JESSIE STEWART Stoners. ANNA BELLCHAMBERS William Bellchambers. Last owned by Capt. William Edwards. It was built in 1864 at Frenchman's Bay by Wm .Bell chambers. Deck - 53' beam - 1316" - hold - 51. Built to carry wood. On the map, Wm Bellchambers farm is Lot # 28. B.F. ( right on the lake shore. RAPID CITY owned by Tom Sowerby, sold her to George Atkinson who lost her off Scarbor ough bluffs in 1917. Tom Sowerby sailed , as a boy with Capt. O'Brien on the Madeline. I visit- ed Tom Sowerby Jan 31, 1971. He told me schooner stories and gave me pictures. He was born in 1883. His mother "Granny" Sowerby was a mid -wife for many babies, including me. A small part of the Schooner Fleet that called at Frenchman's Bay. J.F.. Edwarda, who lived at the Bay, said he cou.ited as many as thirty-five schooners in the Harbor at one time. His Grand -father, Capt. Wm. Edwards, was owner of the "Anna Bellchambers". a TOP - Lake Ontario showing the Erie Canal. Schooner's took their cargo to Oswego, re- loaded on horse drawn barges, then down the Oswego canal to join the Erie Canal at Syracuse. Down the Hudson River to New York and world markets. The Erie Canal played a big part in the development of the Lake Ontario Region. :7LLAGE OF:.. IF IIRPORT -� i� COMME'--"R'++CE 5T. ' Q. �xx A map of the village of Fairport. From Beer's Atlas 1877. 33 1 II 1� �I 1 , �'� �tC. , 4 l III 1 � ,��`�� a. 'N �� I � � � �%� (� � 1 34 I� , 1111{{ 1., ,1 { 'l1, tl'i1 ' 1,�,1,', '1� 1�� '1 V� 'l1, I I It .I) '�1 '�} fell 1\\\1111 t,'' i 1 C�'1 .' I, 'I 'I I � I 1 I I�. 1 ` J�'I I 1 �A ¢� •1.1 �I 11; 1,1 ` 11'?�I � 11,?.,,. �•' I +, 'II � 1 ,�I'I 1 ''+ I' 1 •. i ' � �', I;V i1 .I,1'1,i , • � , I I� � � �',, d ` I � } I I I � t I'` � ' ,I It ,,� t.. III � '''�; � �, �,. ,` I ; ;' � ; , \ ' �\ � � � t ' 1 .1 ', I' � .`'�� , 111 � I I C' INX I It 00 z �0, 0 1AI Ap; z mil it Tq it Al E,�J'fe''�Fse A yr, 0.Y lE Y r 35 C so, r <• c .a a x ,, , ye s �..,. 1VT e �'i D d .sk h k � .'""�3.._,2� : .a..^'?q•: °aS" '�.Fi' ..t. .�' .e<jy osaf'- TOP - The "Maple Leaf" owned by the Mansfields, was rebuilt by Lem Dorland of Bronte in 1886. Had a graceful "Clipper Bow". BELOW - The "News Boy" built in 1885 by Lem Dorland, Bronte. It was one of the last schooners to call at the Bay (Pickering Harbour) - Circa 1923. Both schooners were fast. I fy, _ .....ra,,.,gy�, ... �V ,,,V�, w•...s+ 6i#^.✓ 4 r :. Y „ :A-,.. ..�.. .... qI ; i� 1 a a ■ 0, ,1- 36 I� fit, re ..__.., ._.._�_ J <, ;. 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H �.'�'.:�� it •.I 0�-1 l -� .. �_ .•C:u:�• � �..IVi �� ly�'Cy ' •'`dam r��n°I�e rti CA:,. ? h. • i ¢' �� :±� 1� Iti I � � �`'f • .,�``� II�,S�� �0� ■ �� o-' U,^�� .I Q � *� t��a '� � q Qj pxv°?� Ij � .;y--.' - "�j ' """ �` Jf`" �� � ■, rrutC- v .� � - � -- �r• 0~�hn �f•.. z�os2,1}'sC» . a t, ,i � ` ? I � a I II ,�c,'•'�1� II�T. n Z,� r�'C,. � � Q, I N i � � .1 � � d �.'� r a �'� � I -' ' �rTi11l ! < . jL � � i tr. l 't,l� }*-s..-_-.I � .'r N .� I r ° � 0 '�i�l i`:� •r1 ; 9 .. �j :I I : i ~ �j ••/" - � 'tinrtA,71• �'� �Itil r� .il-�c..l C i :� •al�� W �^' :I 1. ^`• .. I . ...._-. f l � � a. c Y:iti :, � � fir r i _-`_---� ■i• � � ?z 0 � o � ■ ■ t, I � � I � . .. " '� y■ Y' �j (j. c•. ■� Jr h � �. IC' - ` ��., ■ if rP fa . >tt+n.0 ~'�e� �' ' ,, , i-�- j'-'--� � � I`' I � �� t �' _ - •�.�-.r!- 77 7� / LAKE ONTARio This map is from Beers Atlas of Ontario County ~���1\•`-- ' 1877 - Showing farms, buildings, etc. Base Line School is shown Lot 18, Base Line and Brock R'd. - The Village of Duffins Creek, is now Pick- ering Village. The Lot numbers are shown on \ Base Line (first east - west road north of Frenchman's Bay). The R.R. is now C.N.R. and was put through in the 18501s. i 37 THE STORY OF THE ANNA BELLCHAMBERS. The following account of the wreck of the Anna Bellchambers was copied from a newspaper article called "Schooner Days" which was a regular weekly feature in the Toronto Evening Telegram newspaper in the early 19401s. The article was written by C.H.J. Snider, and was titled - "A Hesperus out of Frenchman's Bay." Like the gentleman who caught the tiger by the tail, Schooner Days has some difficulty in letting go, in the case of Frenchman's Bay. Since the last reference to this historic port and prehistoric site, many communications have come, some impart- ing information, more seeking it. Mr.Thomas Pizer 177 St. Helen's Avenue, wrote: Sir, I enjoy reading Schooner Days, very very much as I was born in Dunbarton 75 years ago, I remem- ber old Frenchman's Bay and the activities which kept the harbour alive, but now it is only a memory. Last week you mentioned the Anna Bellchambers. s This Schooner was owned by my granddad, Wm. Bell - chambers, and I was wondering if you have a record of the particulars of the Anna Bellchambers (schooner) disaster. My uncle Wm. Edwards was the skipper, and my cousin, Joe, was washed overboard and drowned. If you can find space in future issue of Schooner Days, giving me a write-up of particulars of this schooner disaster, it will be greatly appreciated also by my remaining relatives. Yours sincerely, THOMAS PIZER, 177 St. Helens Ave. Toronto. A Capt. Pizer commanded the Belle, built in Oakville in 1854, and Wm. Pizer was the registered owner of the Anna Bellchambers in 1864. More- over, Wm. Edwards was one of the two men, Wm. Henderson being the other, who with a horse- ! powered dredge of some sort cut the channel through the sandbar which turned Frenchman's Bay from a pond to a port in 1853. Knowing the Pizers to have been masters or owners of small craft themselves in Schooner Days A we shall tell the story of the Anna Bellchambers sometime soon, as it was told to us sometime ago by two old sailors now gone to glory, Capt. Jack Marks of French- man's Bay, and Wm. Ward, fisherman of Ward's Island. 46) lk s M ' THE STORY OF THE ANNA BELLCHAMBERS. In 1864, with the American War drawing to a close, William Bellchambers built a little schooner in Frenchman's Bay. He named her the Anna Bellchambers, after his wife. The vessel was called "Anna Bell" for short, so her name has become confused with that of Anna Bellchambers, in narration, but Anna Bellchambers it was, and so it stands on the first Dominion register after Confederation. This gives the vessel's dimensions as 52 feet long on deck, 13 feet 6 inches beam, 5 feet depth of hold and 31 tons register. She was therefore a narrow version of one of the many stonehookers which used to crowd the bridge of Port Credit or Westmarket street slip in Toronto. She was not a stone -hooker, but a wood carrier, one of the fleet which supplied the growing Queen City with fuel for its homes and factories steamboats and locomotives. There were no in- ternal combustion engines then, coal was a novelty, and everybody used cordwood, hard or soft. Wood - wharves stretched from George to Yonge street, and were piled with cordwood like the coal mountains of to -day, at the east of the harbour. Towards the end of October, seventy years ago the Anna Bellchambers, loaded fifteen or twenty cords of green wood on the shore half a mile east of Frenchman's Bay, ferrying the sticks from the beach. It blew hard from the north- west, but she lay in the lee, and when the wind lulled, ventured out for the wood market in Toronto. Her captain was William Edwards, maybe the very a man of that name who cut the channel into French- man's Bay from the lake with a horse -power dredge in 1843. Capt. Edwards had two men in his crew, w Peter Young of Dunbarton, an old saltwater man, and another named Mansfield, and he also took along his son, Joseph Henry, a lad of fourteen. « The schooner had been named after his mother, who had died four years before. A man and a boy could handle the small .l schooner, but she leaked with the heavy deckloads, and extra crew was required to keep her pumped and a to pile out the wood at the wharf. While the wood was in her, she was sure to float, but in the two preceding autumns she had waterlogged while trying to get into Toronto, and lifesavers had taken her crew off and helped pump her out when the lake calmed down. • • 39 10 0 Capt. Jack Marks of the R.C.Y.C. steamer Kwasind used to tell of seeing his boyhood chum, Joe Edwards, going aboard the Anna Bellchambers that morning, all eager for the trip to the big city, his pockets bulging with red snow apples, his eyes dancing with expectation. It took hours for the laden schooner to beat up the meridian of the Eastern Gap. This was then a half -mile stretch of shallow water, across the long neck of the Peninsula which started at Scarboro Bluffs and hooked around towards the Garrison and Queen's wharf at the far west end of Toronto. There was a narrow, winding channel through it, marked by two bouys, but no lighthouse and no piers. When Capt. Edwards got this far he anchored, and sent one of his men ahead, in the schooner's little scow, to hang lanterns on the buoys, for it was dusk and the wind was going around so that the schooner had to zigzag to get through. He did this with some misgivings, for it was just in this same position that the Anna Bellchambers had waterlogged twice before; and she was already leaking more than enough. a The man either missed the buoys or lost the lanterns, and sculled on across to the city. when he got what he wanted there, it was blowing ' too hard for him to get back. The wind had gone around to the east and was freshening to a gale. The Anna Bellchambers reared and plunged at her anchor, with all on board watching anxiously for a lantern's gleam and a hail from the return- ing scow. They pumped and pumped but the water gained on them. The Port Credit scow Samson or the Olive Branch, they couldn't be sure which, in the early ° night drove past under squatted foresail. They cou_-+ just make her out in the dark. They talked of her big race with the Catherine Hayes and the Hurter, ten years before, when Bob Collins wrung the Samson's mainmast head off carrying sail. Billy Hutchinson was sailing with more caution this time. They climbed up on the drenched deckload, for the "Annabel's" deck was now under water. The deckload began to wash away. Before it was all gone,the weight of it, watersoaked, rolled the little vessel over on her side. Poor Peter Young was swept off and drowned, although Capt. Edwards caught him once. He could not hold on in the fore rigging. Capt. Edwards scrambled up the main rigging and lashed himself to the crosstrees with young Joe buttoned inside his overcoat to keep him warm. The only friend they had left • M i was the tall stone lighthouse on Gibralter Point, two miles away. Its regular flash through the darkness beamed encouragement. "Bear up Joey," said the father. "They'll see us soon as daylight comes, and take us off. They did that the last time and the time before. It'll soon be light. It'll soon be lightl" "Don't be scared to die pa, I ain't," whispered Joey through numbed lips. "I can hear music sounding on the shore." But the only earthly music was the tramp of the surf and the howl of the increasing wind. It got darker after midnight, and thick smothering snow began to fall. The light on the point shut out, hidden in snow swirls. Even the faint glow of the city gaslamps on the clouds vanished. Billy Hutchinson, homing for Port Credit, missed this stern range, and could see nothing of the Port Credit light ahead. In the dark he tried to round the point of Toronto Island and gain shelter at the Queen's Wharf, but the hooker swamped in the trough of the sea and drift ed before the bursting billows until she struck on the Dutchman's Bar and was dashed on to that shaly headland on the far side of Humber Bay known various- ly as Pig Iron, Two -Tree, Hooten's and Van Every's Point. And there she was found the ne;:t day, her masts gone, decks stove in, everything covered with snow and ice and Billy Hutchinson and his mate dead in the breakers. William Ward, hardy fisherman whose name survives in Ward's Island, had to dig his way out of his Island cottage in the morning. The cottage stood a thousand feet south of the present island breakwall, and three fathoms of water now washes over its hearthstone. The first thing he saw on the shore was cordwood. "Don't tell me the "Anna- bel" has waterlogged again!" cried he. He fired a gun and roused Bob Berry, the big black oarsman, a and they ran a fishing skiff down the snowbank to look for the wreck. By this time it was light enough to distinguish a sort of iceberg rising and k falling to eastward, but not moving in with the seas. They pulled to it, through a wide wake of floating cordwood and found a mass of ice -coated spars, rigging, cordwood and planking which cry- stallized into a small schooner on her beam ends. There was a blob at the main crosstrees which they took to be an unstowed topsail. Wm. Ward hacked with his clasp Knife at frozen lashings, and cut loose the captain and his son in one mass. The frozen bundle fell inti the boat. The rescurers dragged the mass into the Ward cottage and sent across to the city for three doctors. 41 For seven hours, till darkness fell on that short November day, they worked ceaselessly on the man and the boy. When they lighted the coal oil lamp on the kitchen table Wm. Edwards began to murmur; "Light! Light! They'll see us soon and come for us Joey! Its getting light now!" But for Joey the light that shone was from the place where there is neither sorrow nor cry- ing, and there is no night there, for the Lord God giveth them light. He had passed hours before into the arms of our Heavenly Father. The Anna Bellchambers parted her cables as the day wore on and drove up the lake. Her broken hull washed in on the beach under the tall lighthouse whose far off ray the night before , sole comfort of the perishing, had been smothered by the November snow while four fellows died. Such was the wreck of this Lake Ontario Hesperus in the midnight and the snow seventy years ago. The facts are as given by Capt. Jack Marks, Capt. Wm. Ward, and Mrs. Edith Southgate, 1096 Queen street east, who had them from her mother, a sister of Capt. Edwards, who survived the wreck. Capt. Edwards married twice, and had a second son, Joseph who lives at 83 Green- wood avenue, and has been very kind to Schooner Days. The date of this was Oct. 30th 1873. The Capt. Wm. Edwards mentioned in this story was the great Grand -father of Pearl Clark, of Brooklin. Her Grand -father was Oliver Edwards who married Pearl Rodd, whose sister Bertha Rodd was the first wife of my father Reginald Fuller. 71, FAV THE BAY The Edward 's family came to the Bay from , �j Cornwall England in the 18401s. They were one of the oldest families at the Bay. It was Wm. Edwards and a Mr. Henderson that cut the channel through the sandbar in 853 Wm Edward-s first married Anna Bellchambers, who passed away Jan.31, 1869, age 28 years. They had a son Joseph Henry born in 1859, who was lost in a schooner disaster Oct. 31, 1873, age 14. Wm Edwards later married Elizabeth Worfolk and had another son Joseph, and a son Oliver. Elizabeth was a sister of Sarah Worfolk, my great grand -mother. Joseph Edwards was laid to rest beside his mother in a little cemetery in Dunbarton. The cemetery fell into disuse because of Eriskine Cemetery being so close. In 1935 the headstones and remains , from the little cemetery were re- moved to Eriskine, and a cairn erected with the headstones as part of it. The old Dunbarton Cemetery was cleaned up and sold. The cairn is on the south side of Eriskine Church, Dunbarton. This practice of moving stones and remains, abhors me. The same thing happened to my great Grand- parents, Powell, in 1991, when four or five stones were removed and placed elsewhere. After the disaster of 1873, Capt. Edwards gave up sailing, and for the rest of his life, he followed the building trade. The Edwards residence at Frenchman's Bay. In later years occupied by Len and Dorothy Burningham and family (Winnie and Betty). • The :.ause was still standing in 1990. "THE MAIL" Toronto, Saturday, November 1, 187;�.73 RESULTS OF THE INOUEST ON THE BODY OF JOSEPH EDWARDS. The Jury returned the verdict - "That the said Joseph Edwards, on the 30th day of October, in the rigging of the schooner, Anna Bellchambers, off the island, came to his death through exposure to the inclemency of the weather. The Jury further stated that Messes. Chas. Coleman, J. Mc- Knight, John McMahon, Geo. Smith and the bar -tender at Mead,s Hotel deserve every commendation for their efforts in recovering the body of the deceased and saving the life of Captain Edwards." CITY MATTERS - The Anna Bellchambers Wreck. The body of Peter Young, the sailor who lost his life last Thursday morning by being washed off the Anna Bellchambers, has not been recovered, although a diligent search has been made near the scene of the disaster. C�cfi V 0 iff , BAY FOLK SOWERBY John Sowerby born 1827 - died Feb. 7, 1895. Age 68 years. Elizabeth Sowerby (Fisher) born 1843. Died Mar. 9, 1925. Age 82 years. All who knew her called her "Granny" Sowerby. She was mid -wife from Whitby to Scarborough. They had two sons Willie who died Aug 30,1899 and Thomas born 1883- died Nov. 18, 1972. He was 89 years old. Thomas is buried in Eris!--�Ptery. His mother, father, and brother at Fairport. They lived on Lot #5 ,Block "C" in 1848. Tom and his father were lake people. In the mid- 1930's, Tom built an ice house, north of his house, corner of Liverpool road and Commerce St., just south of the burying ground. It was not a success, as the demand for natural ice was past. t sr 11 Granny Sowerby" 45 BAY FOLK 1\ FLETCHER, HILL, & CORMAN Four well known names, from schooner days through sand and gravel, fishing, and summer resorts, were Frank and Al Fletcher, Rube Hill , anf AApdy- 4a!�' Corman. - all bachelors. L, d— i* They built a house (shack) called "Duck Inn". s� right on the seaters edge, at the foot of P tAlyv`AevD � Ste. The origin of the name "Duck Inn", came from having a low door, and you had to "duck" to get in. They were all in the fishing business, having boats, nets, etc. Frank also worked for the sand and gravel company. The gravel washing plant was near the piers. A railroad ran up the beach, to haul gravel to the plant. A steam engine with gondola cars, for gravel, made up the train. Frank Fletcher was the engine driver. Of the four, Andy Corman was the only one to marry. He bought the old engine house and turned it into a nice little home. Frank Fletcher was engaged to marry my aunt, Grace O'Brien, in June 1929, but, Grace died 6n Dec. 29th, 1928. Frank never married. After the lampree finished the white fish, Frank worked with Len. Burningham, a building contractor. t Al Fletcher died in the early 301s. Frank Fletcher died in 1986. 7z Early lots at Fairport were owned by the following: Avis, Blight, Sowerby, Hadley, Reid, Brown, Edwards, Clarke, Taylor, Stoner, Pegloe, Andrus, O'Brien, Mansfield, Wade, Lake Simcoe Ice, Reddick, and Sparks. Two acres conveyed to Pickering Harbor Co. by John Palmer - June 1854. BURNINGHAM Len Burningham came to the Bay, around. 1910. He worked at the ice houses, also the sand and gravel company. He worked a couple of seasons .� on the "Maple Leaf", with Charlie Mansfield. He made $25 per month, board, and sleeping accommodations. They were stone hooking and taking pea gravel to Toronto. He reported, " A person has just not lived who hasn't sailed on a good sized schooner, with a fair wind ,on a good day with all sails pulling. The longer the trip, the more exciting. It puts all power propelled boats in the shade for excitement". via- moo 14114 /' wiq :] ' Ij '<'� �' i � ti ~� <4�ye Yeta` it • •, l i� • i5 , ' iv. r . � � ^i w.y�.� d � +�ab1 b4. �G � ! r , ,l.J' •.+ a fV mot• f Y i^' , ,.;ar a � , 7,a ' • 1 .L,i•, t � h�DDVV, 1h��` �i. �� • j �, M J^Tf4Y I' � {�• w7'I• TI • rat " M .. Rr ��'�, ,• •" .i4! ,J,,,n. Y2 �! 'r�r�i IIIII.yl1' � *ta' i =T���r.,� r -. r •I '•� ' �� �• .1�1�1 V "� I I (II.I•�[I�CI.7v`�Jr�K M • i' "�i,�. d l%� till to Y^f •w - C � : ♦/,Ij � J' ��� �-, �I�lil+1,�.� �r.. 1 . :u �•}��i �. � y. 1•'i' L..., ., �Si ,��� fit•' q� �tQi ;` F 1 �'iti �� � � �"� ��� , y�r ) S•�� i �1 {•iLf�li• r�. •� / . t •Si - '�'J-'. .. J, •C'^'r. i9 { [I'�iV '� yr/ • �. ier fi U) 4-) Ul 4j a) 0 L) 0 Ow 4-4 0 M 1-4 0 t)) 4-) C 040 0 0 O ro r- m ro (1) Ov4 ro ­4 W S4 44 —1 '0 �4 --I r(5 > 0 E- En 4� ° .0 M 44 �4 �4 Y 0 f13 �4 In rO M 4-4 4 M U) C) cu Z 0 �4 00 04 0 0 0 E �4 P4 ro 04 S4 - W >1 0 Q 4--) > 4.) w 44 � P4 u m -P t2 o 17 LA • CL IX w pEi . \ 40 �l 3 3 S )33,kON'VH L Lm - 71"14 LLI N! v io'cp iS 3NNViS 3 8 1 1Z. Cl- cv� 41� JW 0 I'd 3 A L N n o w N., 0 N "Ji t7. • BENJAMIN WORFOLK Two of Benjamin and Mary Ann Worfolk's daughters married two Sparks brothers.: W.W.Sparks married Sarah Worfolk - July 2, 1871. James Sparks married Amy Worfolk - Nov.14, 1881. 50 The Vnitby Chronicle March 21, 1912 DEATH of BEN-jAi'1.11 WORFOLK On Sunday morning (March 17) one of the'oldest residents of �4niitby, i Mr. Benjamin Worfolk, died at the home of his daughter, 1,irs. Thos. Ross, l Perry St. at the advanced age of nearly 90 years. Mr. Worfolk had been about town until about a week previous to his death. lie had an attack of la grippe, and the worn-out vital powers collapsed. Mr. Worfolk was a big man physically and his stalwart form was a familiar sight upon the streets as he took his daily walk. l tor. Worfolk was born in Yorkshire, England, on August 31, 1822, II and came to Canada 56 years ago. lie has resided here almost continuously ever since. He first engaged in sailing, then he vrurked for a nu:aber of years as engine driver, when Chester Draper was harbor master. And lie helped to build the present piers at the harbor. He was a county constable: for some ;ears. He was contractor for moving buildings up to his 80th year. In politics he was a Liberal, and in religion he belon,ed to Brethren. lie le«ves to „,�)u:-n his death seven dauFhters- 1.1:S. Spar.-s, of Pic::erin7; ,"_rs. E,:ward, , nunbarton; ,"•L llet.._ 1i:,7- . of Bradford; i,'L^... D. ::core, of Detroit; Mrs. J. li. 5,,r-:., 017!cJt 'aF B.C.; i-irs. T. 'Al. Ross, of Whitby; 1irs. J. Bowsher, of Brantford; _,nd three sons --William R., of Galt; Joseph A. of Origian, Ill.; Jas. H., of Whitby. The funeral was held on Tuesday afternoon to St. John's burying ground, Port Whitby. Mr. Torrance, of Oshawa, assisted by Pev. M, E. Se:csmith, conducted the funeral service. Benjamin Worfolk, My Great, Great Grand -father was born in Yorkshire, England. He married Mary Ann Robinson. In 1849 they lived in Grimsby, in Lincoln County, England. They had a daughter bui,1 June 1, 1849. This girl was to be my Great Grand -mother. Benjamin is listed as a mariner. Most of my mother's people were seafarers, another of his daughters was Elizabeth, who became Mrs. Wm. Edwards. Mrs. B. Worfolk,(Mary Ann Robinson) died May. 11 , 1883 . 51 0 BAY FOLK STONER George and Ira (bachelors) lived in a very small house at the south end of Liverpool R'd., east side. When the bridge was built in the late 19201s, it was found that their house was on the road allowance. It was -left that way, untl they passed away, then was removed. George's Grand -father was a veteran of 1812- 1814, war. The Stoner's were mariners,and sailed on many different schooners. Abraham and Betsy (George and Ira's parents), had eleven children, four 'goys and seven girls. Ile — Ili ,I 10 (!' ;1 Frenchman's Bay.. on Sunday . 8ep t. I M 1898 id - Abraham Stoner, 4- Aged 73 years, I month, and 5 days. ' The tzMeral, wiU.i 'leave his late ' residence on r T,.esday', 13th. = t 2";o'clock- P. na., . and. proceed to Frienrc s burying,' ground x for iniermenl. .Frtets and a"�quainiarices �vill�2ease accept this intimation, n� 'b aI Y 0 0 0 u 54 BAY FOLK MANSFIELD Thomas Mansfield Sr. was born in England in 1851. He worked in the mattress trade, as did his father Henry Mansfield. Thomas came to Canada in 1867, from London, England. He worked in the bush a short while, and then went to the Bay. He had a little store and also took produce to Toronto by horse and cart. He married Ardelia Marks (1858 - 1929), daughter of Daniel and Elizabeth Marks. My Grand -dad O'Brien bought his house from the Marks. Mrs. Thomas Mansfield Sr. was born in that house. They had 11 children, 2 died shortly after birth: Charles (1875-1956), Charlotte, Ada born 1876, Lou:se,Thomas, Annie, Emma born 1886, Wilbur, Marjorie (1899-1961). Thomas Sr. had the Schooner "Maple Leaf". His son Charles was the Captain. Each year , Thomas, Charles, and Thomas Sr. would cut a load of marsh grass, from the head of the Bayr and take it to Toronto, to a mattress Factory. Thomas Jr. ran the store at Fairport. Charles had a fishing boat and the stone hooker. Marjorie (1899-1961) married Fredrick Scott (1881-1970). They had two children, a daughter Helen (Ryder), and a son Harold. HILTS ^. The Hilts family owned the Schooner "North N' Url West", later sold to Captain Goldring, Whitby. _._ )al James Hilts was a Mason, joined the Doric Lodge Feb. 1, 1891.-Listed as sailing master. He had a son Oswald (Pete) who had a farm on the east side of Liverpool R'd. It went right to the lake. Pete's son Grant carried on farming until it was bought by the Bay -Ridges Development Co. The Pickering sewage plant is built on swamp land at the foot of Liverpool R'd., the rest is sub -division. Sad that all of these old farms have to suffer the indignity of a sewage plant, dump, race track, or miles of Pizza places, Dairy Queens, etc. Such is Progress !!!!. 55 V 4fiL,C3 Thomas Mansfield Sr.'s Store. THE BAY G c The Elevator with a rare visit from a steam Carrier. The ELEVATOR - Note the Light House. Scal'on 5he Ras�!, (Composed after a pleasant sail on Frenchman's Bay, and \ after testing the speed of Mr. Sparks new steam yacht). We swiftly go, thro' waves that flow, With sunbeams on them dancing; With scarce a frown the sun Iooks down, His darts around us -glancing. All crowned with foam, the billows come, The deep blue sky o'er -arching, Each crested wave like warrior brave, Away to battle marching. The waters glint, with varying tint, I watch their bright commotion, And long for life of furless strife With inivTllty waves of ocean. Away, away, my fancies stray To islands green and floral, To Slliilll: r t1111c. ,Ind S"1111111C1- c11111C 13,;yorld the reefs of cor�jl. O far-off strand of fairy land. Where strange bright birds are singing, The billo%. -s roll as fleet my soul Its fancy flight is winging. 57 O land of thought, what gems are wrought In gay fantastic weaving! Its realms are fair, devoid of care All grief and trouble leaving. I wake from dreams, the lightning gleams My fancy isle forgetting; On, on, good boat, at anchor float, Or we shall get a wetting. Brave boat you glide, safe thro' the tide, And Tho' no sail is swelling, Away you start, a beating hurt, Your outward course propelling. I would Proclaim aloud your nanic: "Scintilla," staunch and hearty, I-I0�v well you bore us front the shore, A merry laughing party. Long May you ref` n, the brigllt Llue main, And free from all disaster; Good luck and health, the sea111an's wealth, The lot of thy brave master. Adalena Westriey, Pickering, July 2nd, 1884. MR. Four Generations First Row - Little Girl, Pearl Clark, sitting on her Great, Grand -mother's lap. (Mrs -William Edwards - Elizabeth Worfolk). Oliver Edwards, Grand -father, (foreman of the ice plant.) Back Row - Mother of Pearl Annie Fyke (Edwards). I Elizabeth Worfolk was the sister of Mrs. W.W. Sparks (Sarah), my Great Grand -mother. ((u 1 ;'-"*' A Delightful Trip. / � k+ A nien;y and plonmant picnic party was that Whie'li uiet on board Mr. NY. NV. Sparks' stenin yncht " Scintilla," on Area• day lnst, bound for Victoria Park. The party included Messrs. Lonis Wrwary (chirf stowart), John anti Alex. Cntlibert, W. 0. 1faiti, 1). O'Connor, Thos. Itonder• � son, John linntiug, it. limey, it. AYor•' folk, null L. S. Ackerinan, of l'ickeriug ; It. pecker and Thoa. hfoaly, of Livorlx)ol Market ; Goo. Parkor, L. Grant and John i )ticIntomh, of Dtiuhartou, Willi Cnptniu Spnrkm and whoelmninn. After sting that the lockrr Was well storod With provisions, the harhor was left at nhont 1 l o'clock. j A deli •fitful mail of less than threo hours' aver t�to stuooth lake hronght the party to Victoria Park, whero largo crow is from Tormito were niot, Monday being the civic holiday in that CI Atrolling through the mha+ly groves, cliattiug with ac�naiutnuces, etc., filled up tho tiuio, anti the return Journey was cotuiiioneril at tweetYty tuiuntes after five, anti tho' liarbor again rencrhetl at 8 o'clock, every•' one being delighted with tho tlny'm outiug. , An the liers were roaclied, n licarty veto of thanks was teudered Captniu Sparks for Ilia g�enerosity in placing Ilia .triin little y�acilt at the disiwmal of the party, to which lie matte a stiitablo remjcmao. Tlio "Scintilla" was built throughout roughout by Mr. Sparks last winter. Sho is 17 ft. a in Icing, width of beani,7 ft. 8 in., t qAh of INI, 8 it. 10 in., anti will carry thirty tt�oopleii0i"00 r engine is a anti Loilor 4 liorme,a; screw, 20 in. in diaineter. With ilia, stows she will rnu six iuiles an hottr ilicely. To Mr. L. O'Leary the part � is also in. debted for courtesies extoutlod, lie Having boeu chiefly iuofruineutal in gottiug up Nits excursion. 59 THE BAY News items of Fairport, Ont. Clippings from the Pickering News, etc. The following is business done at Frenchman's Bay up to May 1, 1882. Schooner "Athol of Kingston" - Capt. J. Marks left on 21st of March, and has now made seven trips with gravel for Toronto. Schooner "Bell" - Capt Hilts, 10 trips of stone from the harbour for Toronto. Schooner "John Wesley" - Capt. McCourt 8 trips. Two 5f them gravel and one sand for the new Sugar Refinery, Toronto. He has contracted for 8000 yards this season. Schooner "Mary Ann" in twice. Capt. O'Brien. Schooner "Maple Leaf" in once. Capt. Mansfield. Schooner "Vienna" has made 8 trips from the port with grain. Schooner "Nellie Hunter" 1 trip with grain. Pickering Harbour - May 1884. The Schooner "North West", loaded with stone Sat. A.M., sailed to Toronto, unloaded and returned same day. The stone fleet is doing a good business this season. 1884. White fish are now being caught, the comm- ercial fleet reports. The Schooner "North West" and "Lillian" and scow Schooners "John Wesley" and "Mary Ann" arrived on the 20th and 21st, May 1884. Pickering News , April 15, 1885. The ice in the bay is nearly all gone, and the Schooners are again loading their hefty cargoes for Toronto. Our worthy Harbour -Master, Mr. Sparks is busily engaged in building another steam yacht which will surpass the last one the "Scintilla". June 24, 1887 Mr, Sparks is now engaged in building an elevated railway near the dock, in order to expediate the unloading of coal. It willbe quite a convenience when completed. The new stean yacht has not received all it's fininshing touches as yet, but is in good shape for excursion parties. Mr. Sparks intends effect- ing some changes in the awning that covers the top to make the trip more enjoyable and pleasant. THE BAY July 17, 1896. C.H.C. Wright has just had completed at Frenchmans Bay, a handsome and commodious yacht, a two master. The boat was first put upon the lake , Monday afternoon, and in the evening, we had the pleasure of a sail upon her, which we much enjoyed. Mr. Wright is an enthusiastic sailor and will derive much pleasure from his splendid yacht, ere his autumn duties beckon him back to the dingy old walls of the school of science. Wm.W. Sparks built the yacht and it is a splendid test- imonial as to his ability in that line. W.W.Sparks, our genial harbour master is building a neat commodious yacht, which he informs us he.intends putting an engine into, if it proves satisfactory, our pleasure -seekers may expect short holiday trips through Mr. Sparks generosity. The total population of Fairport in 1912 was 25 people. (From Len. Burningham's notes.) Wm. and John O'Brien reports their white fish catch for 1923, from May 8th-June 12th, and Sept. 5th.-Nov.19th - 8629 lbs. of white fish Value $1377.11. May 31, 1918. - Frenchmans Bay was a busy place on the 12th. About 100 motors were down there from all parts. The Bay was covered with all kinds of fishing crafts, and it was truly a Gala day. July 1922 - Frenchmans Bay. Old time dancing held at Mansfield's hall on Sat. night was much enjoyed. While Harbour dues were only 15 cents, Harbour Master Sparks waged an unprofitable war to collect. The three master "Van Straubenzee" could take 9,000 bushels of barley to Oswego,N.Y. and the "Speedwell" could load 16,000 bushels. Enough to fill two Erie Canal barges of 8'000 bushels each. She was in the Command of Capt. John Williams. Around 1910 - 1914 excursions from Frenchmans Bay to Niagara were popular. The passenger steamer "Chippewa" would put into the piers. Then Grand -- father Sparks would ferry the people across the bay, in his yacht, to the piers. The sand and gravel business did not last long into the 1920's. The big ice houses also went in the 201s. The Bay was no longer a port, as far as Commerce went. Now came the motor boats, fun sail boats, too many cars, people. PROGRESS CAUGHT UP !!!. 61 THE BAY 1900 - The wooden steamer "Jenny" loaded with pig iron, tied up to the piers to ride out a storm, when she tried to make the open lake again, she was driven into the light house pier and floundered. The cargo and equipment were salvaged. Part of the wreck lay on the bottom , on the west side of the ;pest pier. The boiler lay on the bottom chained to the light house pier for years. My grand -father took me over to the piers to see the boiler. 1915 - The Pickering Harbour Company started to wreck the grain elevator in the spring of 1915, and took all the timbers, planks, etc. over to the piers, to erect the gravel washing plant. A barge load of white oak planks 3"x10"X10', that had lined the elevator bins , were loaded and sent to Toronto. They had been sold to a furniture manufacturing company. These planks were without knots or nail holes. It was very sad to see the old landmark disappear. The Grand Trunk Railroad could be blamed partly for its demise, as farmers took their grain to box cars at the stations. Freight rates were cheaper than by boat, and. the U.S. Congress had stopped the barley trade. My Grandfather O'Brien lost his job as a foreman at the elevator, but still retained management of the coal business and light -house keeper. - - 1885* (Barley,,')'-I885)6 The nnder*igned is p o prepared to urcIlaso BARLEY', UPBEAT, PEAS, RYE AND OATS, At Priam that will compare favorably with other Markets. No expense is spared to make FRENCHMAN'S BAY ELEVATOR' a Safi and Speedy Place for farmer to deliver their grain at. The late fire in Toronto somewhat impaired the facilities of delivering there. Farmer in Sca+�o' who have not yet been to &Ilia market may depend on fair treatment in weight and prices. Frenchman's Bay is a Safe Place to deliver at. No Wharfs to beck over. No Rail wa Cronhw, No wkistlins Imomotives, No Street lace, NO MARKET FEES. CO A T. A, s A T •rr FOR THOS. MOODY, u 4fl Agent for W. D. Matthews h Co. Liverpool Marks/, Lt Sept., lees. Entrance to Avis Park.- _ room for tents,for thoseswhoraantcto�stay Picnics, days. Pavilion for dancing,Y a few hardwood floor. One of thefinestainutheoprovince. Modern Orchestras - Johnny Remmer, Pickering and Ragnar Stien, Whitby. Y + fi'' h Y.., fP`f�� 1`xp ' - t��.:)�� e t 4 ■■■MWWII �# "" v��� �` ..ram � ° � l Mansfields' new store, operated by Thomas Mansfield Jr. On the same site as the old store . Note: the 1928 Chev. and gas pum q p p ' � l�/ l� �c�lA:�'y�� ,GYXLI 63 ►Who _tEA The Light -house - A fixed green light visible for 6 miles, white wooden tower, Octagonal in shape, 47' high, built on the east pier. The pier is 685, in length. The west pier is 835, long. (1911) THE BAY 61 Two good neighbours, Fred Scott O'Brien, talkin g it oand William good over , out beside the pile on a warm spring day. 6g AVIS TAVERN on Wharf For the thirst Rd' Corner of Liverpool Rd, load of Y teamster, 1;aiting to unload Avis. It is now the home Of their grain. �. (Joan). Mrs Dick 4 The ELEVATOR, - ice houses back left' Schooners waitingto be loaded, - Two THE BAY Four of the "Bay's" young people served in W.W.11. Helen Scott Air Force, , Harold Scott, Air Force, John " O'Brien,, Army, and Richard "Dick" Avis Army. 4M t � 4 7 7 r YbiyF � y i HEr EN SCOTT DAVE O'BRIEN DICK AVIS. 67 THE BAY This is a prayer said by "Aunt May", for Helen Scott, at a luncheon held for her prior to going overseas. 68 THE BAY John Sparks - Born 1771, died 1847. (My Great,Great, Great, John came to Canada twice. Grand -Father), born in Scotland He had He in 1808. Came a son joined the British Arm to Canada in 1811.��� the First Garrison y and was a a grant of 200 acres, For his serviceehet in He then near Chatham, Canada Westceived went back to England , and back and a son William in 1818 came father was born (MY Great, Great Grand - land aboard a ship in Bantryay, Ire - He All weree had two other sons, Bay, Ire - Mar in lake navigation John and Thomas. navi He Margaret. had one daughter, William's first wifeRebecca Spencer died in 1860. He , to Simcoe left the Pic' County and remarriedg area and went McLaster. Had 2 sons a widow Hannah "Ned Sparks", one being the movie actor John Sparks was a �) is not known r PaPermaker b J `J AAfter the he followed that y trade. It ert hear, 1812 _ trade in Canada. settled 14' and his return he moved to Pickering York. (Toronto). to Canada Ir land ickering and In 1832 lei was , for 150 pounds from purchased 200 acres of an original land David Smith. cr" the crown. It grant to Major John This land took Ma Smith to Base Line in all of Lot from ,(now called Bayley). Broken Front, the East side of Duffins St.), the villa Creek, directly It was on D village of s knows Creek Y south of AJaxtLionsand is known as parkslckering); The Club has erecte pO1n X The{ John Sparks cleared a and built ath ere. some of the dense and shipping a log house. He earned a living, forest Piling his catch to York. He repaired schooners. by fishing, It is also built strange and Parents ge that my Great, Great Powell, lived on Lot 6 Broken Grand - about 3 miles east The Powells °f John Front, were my father�SParks on Base Line. were my mother's s kin. The All sixteen kin. Sparks' came °f MY Great, Great, Grand -Parents to the Pickering g area. All from John the British in Elizabeth harks and wife Sarah St. Cemetery, are both buried John Sparks left Y, in Pickering (Chatham) and his 200 acres in Dover Village. four his 200 acres in in East sons and one daughter. g to his ° , �, 119co 69 r t f NO. PR VI1�'" C OF lTPPE'R C-4-N 4D.I. �R.4NT to �-- « -': I of the Town.���f l r 1 in the County o in the _ Tlrict G�E�• 1� 1' � , i7 !(' scllltc --�� Underse Regulations of the Order in Council o Gtbe and Surveyor General's Tic et of L.gCalion of the /� 'J II d� A iniv Uon of,✓� �1 � /S�>� 1.1T. The Settlement duty performed, ' • 1 To the Surveyor Cener� .dllorne Genara4 � 4C. 4C. 4c. �' Dated `Q • day of • y3� John Sparks was granted 200 acres Service in the near war of 1812 _ of land, for ;, i Chatham,CAnada west. 14� in east Dover, ! < C� `- •f"L- 70 John Sparks MARRIED 1771 - 1847 1795 Sarah - 1842 Wm. Sparks 1818 - - M - Rebecca Spencer .1838 1818 - 1860 f Wm- Walter Sparks _ M _ 1848 - 1917 1871 Sarah Worfolk 1849 - 1923 Athelia Sparks 1872 - 1906 _ M _ 1890 Wm- O'Brien 1870 - 1943 ------------ May O'Brien 1893 - 1942 _ M - 1913 Reginald Fuller 1889 - 1977 Ivan Fuller 1919 - _ M _ 1945 Elaine Baum 1920 - Chelan Fuller 1955 - Alison Fuller Holditch 1985 - Heather Fuller Holditch 1987 - M - 1980 Robert Holditch 1951 - Dwight Fuller 1959 - 71 THE BAY It the Bay name "Sparks" was a well Walter Bay for nearly 70 known name Sparks was m Years. William came from of Y laket Grand -father. He His a line Capt. James S navigation people.���� "Beaver", It had a parks owned the She was blown gold gilt Be Barque (j ashore near aver figure head. was lost in the Rochester, N.Y. and Mid 1860's MY Great, Sparks was Great, Great Grand - Parish born in Oxford England, father, John in 1771 - died June lgc7.St. Thomas (last name unknown) born _? His wife MY Great, Died Sarah William S Great, Grand -father Feb. 28, 18a2 Bay, Irelandks, was born aboard a (their son) (born 181g He married Rebecca ship in Bantry in Canada, West Spencer, Pickering, by Rev. Robert )' Oct-1, 183 Spencer Thornton. 8, at died May 27 1860 Rebecca William (my Great and Rebecca Grand -dad had a son William Walter It Duffin's Creek )� He was born Jul He married (Pickering). Died 2� 1845, born i Sarah Worfolk Jul Sept-S10, 1917. n Grimsby, Il,incolnshire, 2En871. Sarah was 1849. Died Oct .23, abeth 1923. gland, June 1, married Capt• William Sarah's sister mentioned). Edwards Eliz- William They lived at Fair (previously Walter Sarah port. eigntaborn at Fairport, Atheliaaand en children, 1• Athelia Mary Rebecca Grand -mother. - born Oct.28, 1872 Died Jan. Married William O'Brien She was 1my 8 22,1906 - Age 34 years. Sept. 2,1890 2. Mary Rebecca Married Thomas Law Sparks, born etc. Pickering Oct. 1, 1874. dealer. Mary died Aug.J c°al, wood., and coke 25, 1932. 3• Walter James Sparks. Born Mar. 7, 1877. Died. Aug, 31, 1948. Died4• ? •Arthur Beau James Sparks, born - Jan. 1, 1879. 5. Will. Jose Died - Dec. 29, 1951. ph Sparks _ Born Augov. 8, 1880. g• 27, 1882. • Married AnnieO'Brien moved to Saskatchewan - Feb. 2, 1959.0 BThey S� ^ lives and lived most Born in WYnyard. They had of their - July 6, 1912. one daughter Ruth. Wuth ynthere. Yard for many years. was post -mistress in Sparks' home She still resides in 72 6. Herbert, Robert, Henry, Sparks - Born April 7, 1883. Died - Aug. 30, 1949. 7• Albert, Ernest, Sparks - Born Jan. 13, 1884. Died - 1945. 8. Frank, Wilmot Sparks Died - Born Dec. 23, 1886. train aMay 8,t1909. Age 22 years. Result of a in Cemetery with his motherland N Y' Buried in Erskine father. 9• Sarah, Lucille, Elizabeth Sparks - Born - Mar. 14, 1888. (Sadie) married Thomas station master in Oshawa. Gormley, Died Apr. 1974. 10. Effie, Allegra Sparks Died - Mar. 2, 1956. - Born Dec. 18, 1889. Married Charles, William Stephenson of Port Dover Charles died 194pt Oshawa, June 19, 1919. Effie - Dec.2q born - June 29, 1920.jhMaa had two daughters. Cecil Preston Jan. 31, rried - Frederick 1942.& Ruth (Stephenson) Morris. Effie Allegra and interred Charles William Stephenson are in the Sparks' Plot in Erskine Cemetery. Wm- Walter Sparks was a Harbour master at Fairport, a Sunday School Superintendent Mason. He joined the Doric Lodae and a listed as a grain merchant. Nov. 1, 18g0r Grand- fathers were Masons. Both ie Great Grand_ Grand -father was Matthew O'Brien , my Great as a a Charter member in 1890. - listed sailor. W.W. Sparks was Methodist, and "Tent pa a Liberal, and a at Fairport. the little "Friends" church p His "rife was petite mother of his ten children. a i'�orfol was the Wm. Walter and (Sarah bdorfoll;) . Rd. for $239 from Caparah purchased a lotjon Wharf Mrs. McCourt Capt. ��m• McCourt, a lake man. Grand- (Sarah) was a sister of my Great Grand -mother Hannah O'Brien. The McCourt's moved to Port Whites Wm, Port was Caere they carried on lake trade. Captain of a ship"fetitia" which brought again fromla1=e head to the Port of Whitby. He also had a stone hooker "John Wesley". 0 � A0 THE HAY 6 inquest into the death of W,'W. Sparks was resumed in the Town Hall on Monday afternoon with the Coroner,' Dr, afcGllivray, presiding.. The crown waa repre- sented by Col. J. E. Farewell, the County Crown Attorney 'and the Grand Trunk PraRailway' by Mr. 'tt, their, solicitor.. Evidence y, was given by C, C, Ravin, the sta- tion agent, who was on the station platform at the ti dme of the acci- - ent ; Dr. Field, who was on the r '< scene a_few minutes after the engineer and fireman, and _H, G. ; Calvert, who was. the last man• to ;::'speak to Mr. Sparks, Afterhear- inR all the evidence, he ar : brought in a verdict exonerating :.'the employees oft lie Grand Trunk - ' ifrom all blame, The general im- `pression seems to be that air, SSparks, in his burry to get to his 'home at Fairport, did not think of danger and did not look up or 'down the tracks to see if a was approactiiug. train •The evidence jshowed that only about two seconds elapsed between the time (SSpat the fireman first saw air. parks when he was approaching ,the crossing and the time of the ,collision, n•hich made the collision inevitable. —The funeral of the late W. W, Sparks, wbicl, took place on Fri. day afternoon last to Erskine Cemetery, was one of the largest ever seen in the township, 31 Sparks being widely knownr, . 't-bull lit I.11any were present from the stir. linges, inclndinfi �,__ :awns and via and SZ_ �, R Foke, ex. E. \ Sinclair, es-11. P. P., of 0,411qrva. His five sons and three dc3nghte_ s were all Ares. ent at the last �,d rites. The funeral service wa..i conducted by Rev. Ur. Marsb, ;assisted by the Rev. air. Uown. The Masonic; order, of which tii� deceased was me mber, ember, was n ell represented by members froin Claremont, Wbitevale, Brougham Whitby and Oshawa, and their impressive service was c,^,ndl.icted at the grave. The pall- be.irers were mem- bers of the pres�:nt and fornierl township councils, .air. Sparks was of which body • about nine ears, member for, expressions of estee aihea,d. the: i his many years of the public in the "rain with; business alr, •,rain and real reputation . forSls�, arks -bciilt up a which makes his death a dealing, aloss to the comrnuLlity. distinct _. MY Great Grand —Mother Sarah Sparks With sons Herb. and Will. —It is with regret that we re- port the death of a well and favor- ably known re%ldent of this town. ship, Mrs. W. W. Sparks, n hich took place at the residence of her son, Albert Spark•, 17.1 Chnrc•h St., Oshawa, on Thursday, Oct. 27th. The deceased, whose maid. en name was Sarah Warfolk, and who was in her 78th year, was born in Grimsby, Lincolnshire. England, and came to Cau,,4 i with her parents when 7 years of age, and settled in Whitby. . Iu 1870 ebe married the late w. W. Sparks nod continued residing in Whitby for twelve years after• wards. Forty yeers ago the moved to Frenrbman•s gay (nowt' Fairport), wbere she has ever since I remided. She had a family of ten, five sons and five daughters, of whom eight survive. These are Walter of Alberta. Arthur of Hevvart, Sask., William of Wyn_ yard, Sask., Herbert of Toronto, Albert of Oshawa, Mrs. Thom, Law of tbi� village, Mrs Thos. Gorin. ley of Oshawa, and Mrs. Stephens of Toronto. Her husband prede. reamed her six years. She was a member of tiie Friends' Church and wag highly esteemed by all who knew- her. Her funeral took place on Monday to Erskine Ceme. I tery, n•hen the service w ducted by Revn ; J. F. Cln as as co ! Dan'barton. This poem best expresses the feelings I have, when I visit Frenchman's Bay to -day. Tize Light of Other Days 0FT, in the stilly night, Ere slumber's chain has bound me, Fond Memory brings the light Of other days around me: The smiles, the tears Of boyhood's years, The words of love then spoken; The eyes that shone, Now dimm'd and gone, The cheerful hearts now broken! Thus, in the stilly night, Ere slumber's chain has bound me, Sad Afemory brings the light Of other days around me. When I remember all The friends, so link'd together, I've seen around me fall Like leaves in wintry weather, I feel like one Who treads alone Some banquet -hall deserted, Whose lights are fled, Whose garlands dead, And all but he departed ! Thus, in the stilly night, Ere slumber's chain h. s bound me. Sad Memory brings the light Of other days around me. THOMAS MOORE 177'9-Z852 / �27 IMAGE NOT AVAILABLE „ i1I 1.01.r I,I'll .• (I&IM 1604144t�I, i'tW'It�11t�* A . + •.:t Ic,t o.•tl 1411 rear it.+r llatnw a 1, •r I I,; trt,•r . •sl►(ling '11e11114 1 „ t,N „Ith hdr �,gntlws' W. A. I 1 t,• , ti Ai rtil,nl of 14W K. Ma• I•t •'et•litvl ht+ry StifidaV 1 ,. • i,% t 1w 1'14etol', liter. Juts. I—I,I'le t,r I Ile villa>;e at - I• •t ,t. t.•t',tllt I,011 Y fit (lie hullleuf 1. 1 l ,.•1,.1r; it 1 raud tuuel- ...' . i,!i1.K tt,1 4 jj,lace nt the 1 II `,.�l,titt•tla�lt•r Monday t,, „•, v, licil 1+4 only IatiKh• a, ,. on11.'11 in nutrrinKrtit The cer•e- t Ille Rev. jild- It, 1'441ltt', Ur tilt, 111111tillt n '. I t'I • `I t . 1111,i �11' . Ellis loft 1 n; t1::in fur I'nirltrl went. t't' rit•t• torsi !,<•4t ]t•ishra I n ; •. 4_111 th,•Ir return of ]nll,i '; (If S. S' I•, 1 \ (.,;I i, - 4 .Iwl I uoe- 1 .,, trut:r, Jf;,lt; •In1. Jr. Ill —011ie t ,I, li ttrlai l�s, \iaggle l i- l lar l y 11(,pkine+. Jr. Her- 1--Lydia Ftill+rr, 1;,.,.,11• (_)liie holler, Sari •1':Irl,,:•, Ann;(- Fi.1- is ;.' lint N,•11;e• Mich- i::(' , NIacIIo.)a!3, Prof. tt YaIe 'n laid till for the Pont ht•7•, (If Tor- ! i..• ,t ",• , ill i h. •ale. "I I vt ht•a•a1 visit:tig her `i : It . . i tit al hove Jet., I•,.t',i: 'Will. I"lilts. t,!' •1',I:()rlto J(-t., t'-. t 1'r ' L• 1 , �ti"il:ilttu, here. �r., `! (� :• �i,t•nt a ft-tt• (law I-, \I: 114,1im, of T(.run' :!f lit i,t•, . ,)f 'l' lrnnt',, na3 ;now- I­ f,:r I'ouple of dtlys tlrie 1. l i • l , •:+tt, t,f llarrie. i:a stround t1. k to 'Li'll{ for imported stal- family are all sick with :II .. f•1 •,. L.,t :(rl• all reported do - lit; It,•I1. ttrlti,, • I r w. Mrs• n:,akinK a large :.I i•I(• frt,ttt Lt,cust Hilt \N•. W.1111•11 installed 11” W041ko 'f`Mlr NUdfaulwli� ilHw„ N Ith a Maw. yuI••111at*00I, nlsphlud 111t1 a 1hr-1u1n1• I wild) dare work cell lt+ntlday t,y Ihre•+►1►• luW �A llushals of red clotlrr rst+txl at Ml. Al their Anida, Ilarry Watts has takuu lint~, hlul, salt a Witte, • tart tts11111ahlet Ytoulltc tack,y� tt•tont the wwt and has twkan till ruslllet► o Ili tour utldst, t+urupyhig th+t h(tulm Owned rccrntly occu}drel 1)7 hire. :Ilc+dland Thu {{►ru 11e of I'urt Union oltttrnd (•ol► rnW1lllt�uns. The niativ frlltntfe tit Barry G(Afrry, third -year 414ilaural atud.•llt of Tonintu Unlroretity, will Iw Klacl tit barn that he is pi-tigressltiK favorably after hay. ing Itnd.trifonr an t1 leratlon tit having fumy -four srltiarw lnellue of s{ein re- uloved to grutt un, r, the bark of a tx,y %•Ito had been .sevemly burned lit Christtilu.M tines. Mr. tiuclfrey it, now in (*race Hospital, Toronto, where -he is havinK hi+ ground attended to along with it fellow-lctude•nt (Norman Alliu, of Ilownaanviilc) w ho tindertreut it s;milar (tpe•rtition for the ,&tile boy. IUl concerned ure pic,6rut>ising far( r- atbly. Dunbar on. Tile members of the DuribarWn corl"regRtion purpose ]lolling their anniversary services on Sun flay the 21,�t iti�:t^, and on Tiles day evening following tea will be Ferved in the basement ftrllowed Ly an excellent entertainment given by fit•Ft-clads talent from Toronto, r,nd will be of it charac- ter that will e,Iual those given ill Massey hall. Ftill part-icultirs trill be given later. Duuba:tor•, Frh. `?lat. Fairport. Captain :Intthew• O'Brien, one (,f t,:ir %vurthiv-t citizena passed away on Nlonolay evening after it very short and pahiftil illne-s. Ht. was in R(x)d health tip to Tlotr; tday evening last. when he was seized with the fatal disease. Capt. O'Brirti had followed the' vocation of mariner up to three years Kgo, when he retired froin y:til'ing and ball charge of the light -house at this port. He was ,t loving husband and father, of a kindly--itud----genial dislxAtion which made hint popular with ail with whom he assueiatetl. e leave:4 a widow, two eons and a slaughter. A mad part of this affair is the serious i mess of his son, William, who is very loin with pneumonia at his own home and was unable W see his father after ho was taken ill. Hie Tuner. a1 took place on Thnrsday to the IL C. cemetery, Pickering, attic was largely attended. " Airs. J61,l a Cogan ' is indisposed three d ya. . Clwln o the 40vPt* enow-atornf run 472 DI I`oelally 11r1t1, I 1•I1111� 11n,1, ll 1N•11 ;I7r1, 11 `t,l ill lelllll11tit ]trcl 1-11 +�. !1 �, rt7u, N1 lAilt+olt :till I': ll yl Fitr111111K 11111, 1: Ile+rstl Ittl, llltullltaln Nu, "till c1a0441 K I.' tetll 11110, A M,trthinK 31.1, 111 Ill,r, It. 1:17, T Nitrtttlt lit. I't AI— It 111r,c1,. , ."_'-t., A Iiatnllt.on 7'.'., A Jlannat,n L !login lit), 11 Iluhharll Yt'/• I't 1 y hnrth111K 82, H1 llarc9ny 0li, ► i'Nnke III, ti Norton 45, .) llttli-, t •It. A John-m 42, J Turne t- :'. Tablet'.'. —A Nim-l►bi I(XI, 1. Jr,11, sun 14. Tablet 11-It For_ytll1 We are still in theff Ladder Trad-. In (.n1, rllau•hinr dt•);n•till cnt We , all kinrl,i c,f 1vot,d turning and Kv„ 1 work. AVe rill your Itlnllxrr and shai + everything made :,f•xV(Kx1. rl)t!bietI rock at,itf el.c. Saw htilllnling ,t � (fling It sper•i:tlty, Krotind. }31ac;t=witllin� in all its br•a:ncl,, Give us a cull. }lmi,e wid lot for �:• cheap. W. I3.'J_1CICSON, :Brock R•,., HiOpkins ARent for , i1 nj kir,de of yr ieles 1-neuu:t+ctured by the :IcLaugh t Co'p, of OBLItiva. S-° 'n r The Empire Medicine Co, of Lon(' ont., has appointed the undit :Be local agent for Pickering, for the most. derfai dl+covery of the nineteenth ce ur For tbb treatment of the Noce, hrcr Bronebisl Tnl,os and Lungit. ItenresCo' , Catarrh, Asthma, Brouchitie, May fe•: and all thrust and • Inng diseuses. W ri for psrticulsre, a stock of treatments at pspairs conetatiCy on hand at. Careen River. ant. - Fruit - Trees I All kinds of Fruit Treen, Shrul) Etc. foe stale. Highest prices paid foil Fall and :ViateeApple4. �.w JOHN E. QEEe A."at. .WESTERN BAKI OF, �"CUAOAI Iaate'pest►esA 1rT sat K!a>19sIMMlat >f+t� ' it Itot,estlbtltd atyltsl...............++11.••• t1u01,n 1tte.t .. .... iM (x• ,'22/92 13: 43 'a412 571 5597 GRAIIHics 4-#4 C.kN I)A wjuu2 POWELL PIONEER CEMETERY ` DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF THE EARLY PIONEERS OF THE POWELL FAMILY WHOSE REMAINS ARE HERE RE —INTERRED FROM THEIR FORMER RESTING PLACE ATlOT 6, BROKEN _FRONT ! RANGE 111, PICKERING TOWNSHIP, ONTARIO COUNTY, JAMES POWELL AND HIS WIFF,,:AND SEVERAL SONS LEFT RICHIBUCTO, NEW BRUNSWICK, W5' SETTLED IN PICKERING CIRCA 1810 AND ON THEIR FARM THE POWELL CEMETERY WAS ESTABLISHED. IN 1815 JAMES POWELL WAS APPOINTED AS AN OVERSEER FOR PICKERING TOWNSHIP. SINCE THEN, MANY OF HIS DESCENDANTS HAVE DISTINGUISHED THEMSELVES IN BUSINESS, POLITICS AND CHURCH AFFAIRS. BELIEVED TO BE BURIED HERE ARE: .TAMES POWELL AND HIS WIFE ELIZABETH SMITH, MARRIED MARCH 1771 AT LONG ISLAND, NEW YORK, BOTH DIED BEFORE 1825. CALEB POWELL, SON OF JAMES AND ELIZABETH, 1799-1862, HIS FIRST WIFE, RUTH WOOD, 1802-1840, HIS SECOND ,WIFE, MARGARET HIGHFIELD, 1816-1892. PHOEBE POWELL, DAUGHTER OF JAMES AND ELIZABETH, HER HUSBAND, NAME UNKNOWN AND THREE CHILDREN, ALL FAMILY,, DIED BEFORE 1825. HENRY POWELL, SON OF JAMES AND ELIZABETH, BORN JANUARY 25, 1786, DIED SEPTEMBER 6, 1870, HIS WIFE ABIGAIL, BORN JUNE 30, 1785, DIED DECEMBER 13, 1869, THEIR SONS: JACOB POWELL, BORN JUNE 14, 1919, DIED JUNE 9, 1827. STEPHEN POWELL, BORN JANUARY 20, 1829 DIED DECEMBER 21, 1842, AND OTHER MEMBERS OF THE POWELL FAMILY, NAMES UNKNOWN. "THEY REST FROM THEIR LABOURS AND THEIR WORKS DO FOLLOW THEM." me_morio_I 't p i hz R i close- ee-e.f Qnd;2.S re- i hlwre. rV..mortod i ns%((e c. (11 tl N •; 30l]°1. FILE NRME 861625 DISK 263 9121192 TYPESET BY: PRY CORR. BY: LB 9/22J92 REV. BY: totting the pro- 1. DO�-le say going rt r +a r,r „U . Sunday morning, Trlrl,nner, tripped catis- p. f-W ,l► wn a number of frncnirwd two of her t ...;�1­1 ling rather badly 71 " 1igy of Q(iinteConference i' 4 annual Epwurth "',;.►t1S. „nventinn thi-i w"k in 1' e. Rev. J. E. Moore n,lrince and Mes.sn9. E. I.. �' ►� a n `rA Fmnk Harvey are appointed by the k.�r'nR LP^gue. e Arthur Percy was en- i akatinR on the rink at ~r v 7l rt ra d ti ri n g the carnival on evening be fell upon the . T�-rA Ding a large number ., t? e rink at the tune, a general ;T-tip wag the result. Someone c. d -_r tal ly gkated over one of hqdtz cutting it very bad - the wound requiring five —"We have just learned that •er31 fancy articles were stolen -otn x- otne of our merchants der- 9 th e Ch ristmas rush. One ar- le taken f roza John Dickie & Co. 1F a f tin cy red leather scimors q+,, w i t h th ree pairs of gilt -han- d sc nor+;. A solid silver salt r a n d spoon were taken from S. Chapman's counter about A =,m a time. --Th- 9,u th Ontario Farmers' tu'e -will hold weetings in the wn hall, Picks ing, on Satnrday, ' n'.'A17 -2 th at Whitevale on �dRy. Feb. Messrs. I.. S. nn.i- and fir. Sbearer will attend :�t e m r p t i n gs and deliver ad- O.F,~°. M i qa Gray will be un- to 1>e prvwent as previonel ^nnnce►ci. Farmers as well as h+ r9 novld not fail to attend "K a is A*t in gg as interesUng and subjects will be dis- -- A f Aw days ago as Jolla Ste. F-,.1riving horse from he met an automobile warp him Winne excitement As ♦the automu- 5111'h a winter i,;the it111 the ")nl bill, Imt in othor rv.l,,,,.ta 01,, cold-Nshioned, %vinter i, moreJlO�il•- able. �%a-z, 2- 6, /f6, —One eft'" t of the mild werither k to induce the piano n�,ent t,) creep mit frmtu hia (101�y sinter inrterR and seek whom }le niny secure aR victims. For the past, two weeks the wocxlq have been thick with there, and it keep,+ one bu•'y dodging them. With all our watchfulne" and alertnewq a few of no have fallen prey to their persuasivenew. How long the epidemic will continue we cannot say, but we hope relief may soon corn e. —It is with deep regret that we report the death on Monday, 1~t Fairport, of Mrs. Wm. O'Brien at the age of 33 years, 2 months and 22 dappse. The decea�•ed, who was danghter of W. W. and Mr'a. Sparks, has passed through a lingering illneRs of Fixteen months suffering from bronchial trouble which gradually weakened her, and also causing heart trouble. She is survived by a eorrowing husband and two young children. The funeral took pl^m on Wed- nesday afternoon when the re- mains were interred in the Fri ends burying grannd at Fairport. —F. Coleman, of Cedardale, wa,a in town.on Monday seeking infor- mdt#mf regarding police villa, geo. The eesidenta of Cedardale bave got uO, a Large petition, which they will present to the County Council this week, o king that body to live them the status of a police village. At the time in which Pickxn ins was made a police village. it was optional with the cooneil as to whether a petition Iff Id be granted or not, but tsow they cannot refuse a largely sign- ed petition. We under mnd that the petition from Cedar -dale has the name of alnxwt every rate- payer - After a short ill new of two dajta f r+vm pneumonia, Wm. G. Peart died on Saturday at his home in Chicago. He was the ering mover ' WtIR gett1TW pened N) l •ec a l arg , and elder) N- Rtngle, mar, enquiring T• wm inform, on the wad the day Rka- hody'ro funr with :tnFp;rr W" once la vet. Thy 1�' trickle tbrn, feeling wp1 mine. cl io Ro few rnomer, had !found another rn, down street mT oeercon' mt�d. myT. Being in perform s.,z upon a ]on-' cesRion. At I was an ezT posed for tell. FaRtr� f"..t, l ca,Ft T- the ice. Fr) lively am It cr I would cr­ bo,v amd mn, only Pre me. to ail thing - a quirk turn thing bappe* lection of w i but I was Rt, forehead, t' tion of my s, on the ice in in g to a farm Sa MATi tA.n R , taken to my man? with t h ing one 9s Vo„ ed up to I P, allow Fat.hvr his owm chn, ,: aye swan er Monday .moon last, when his only daugh- Jessie, was united in marriage to our Ellis, of Ashburn. The cere- y was performed by the Rev. Jtid- McIntosh, Pastor, of the Baptist rch here. Mr. and Airs. Ellis left he o---ing train for points west, dst 1wers of rice and best wishes host c)f friends. On their return y „ill reside in Ashburn. eport of standing of pupils of S. S. 11. Pickering, for month of 0 anu- IW4 : Sr. It% class —:babel Hoov- Pea.rl Doten, Grant Malcolm. Jr. Gordon Booth, Walter Booth, ward Malcolm. Sr. iII—`.'inlet ter, Ada Sti11well. Jr. III —011ie ler, Sara J. Hutclihigs, Maggie tang. Sr. II —Harry dopkins..lr. ivettie Postill� 'Annie Fuller, Her- n R'iudsor Sr. I—Lvdia Fuller, rge Hutchings. Jr. 1--Bessie Hut- ngs, Pearl Taylor, Jeanie; Alalcohn. Tablet —Nellie Michell, Edward Lon, Lucy Bice. Present every --Gordon -Bootle, 011ie Fuller, Sara tchings, Olive 'Taylor, Annie Fe.l- \ettle Postill, George Hutchings, riia F-iiler, Ber,sio Hutchings, Pearl •lor, Edward Wilson, Nellie Idfch- A. E. I.ebtuann, Teacher. ear Ruthve/l 1laedonald, Prof. lln, and Hiss McKidd— Dunbar. Yeb. 21st. Wh;tevale• as. :an spent a :•eel: a. ParkhM, -n-. relative;. Do. 'Tui-ner has Iieen laid up for the _t two weeks with lumbago. i<. a nd :tlrs. John Pouclier, of Tor- i.n, spent the week iu the Vale. Irs. Hamilton has keen visit.iuo her ighter, :hirs. Cook, of Sa:idford. iss Abbie Hilts. of Scarboro Jet., -isiting her brother, Wm. Hilts. iss Sinclair, of Toronto Jet., is iting her brother, «'illiam, here. rs. %V. S. Nla jcr spent a few days th her sister, Hers. Heron, of 'jeron- Dickey, of Toronto, was snow - here for. as couple of days this v u. , -a. ., , ...-. .... n.-- he is progressiug favorably after hav- ing undergone an operation of having forty-four square inches of skin re- moved to graft onto the back of a boy who had been severely burned at Christmas time. Mr. Godfrey is now in Grace Hospital, -Toronto, where he is having his wound attended to along with a fellow-studeut (Norman Alliu, of Bownlanville) who underr;ent a similar operation for the same boy. All concerned are progressing favor- ably. Dunbar on. ek. I. G. Boag, of Barrie, is around is week looking for imported stal- ns. W in. hfeek's family are all sick with rlet fewer, but are all reported do - well. udley Bros. are making a large ipinent of Rpples from Locust H:.l is week. D. D. G. M., J. W. «'onch installed e officers of Brougham lodge, I.O.O. Here last Tliuri caazy evening. e are glad to report that Airs. 'm. 'lister, who has been sick for ',e p si; months is able to be out. Quite; a number attended the funer- of the late Abram Boyer on Sunday :ceased heing held in high esteem in Iis neighborhood. J. Av. Nt'onr-h, who inten�de�d,leaving Tablet A'nlechin 100, L John- son 14. Tablet 1—R Forsyth 14. We are still in the Ladder l r a,de. In oup machine department we do all kinds of wood turning and wood work. We rip your lumber and shape everything grade of wood, doubletrees rock stuff etc. Saw gumming and filing a specialty, -skates ground. Blacksmrthin, in . all its branches. _ Give us a call. House and lot for sale The members of the Dunbarton chew p. congregation purpose 'holding R . H. 3ACI�SON, Brock Road. their anuiversa.ry services on Sun- day the 21st inst., and on Tues- day evening following tea will be served in the basement followed by an ' excellent entertainment given by first-class talent from Toronto, and will be of a charac- ter that will those; given in liastiey 1,11111. r till p:articulars will Ue given later. Durlbartor, FOi21st.� — Fairport. Cnptain %.Iattliew O'Brien, one jof );ir worthiest citizens passed 111Y,11 - oil :lo,,.dny evening after a very short and painful illness. He was in good health up to Thursday evening last. -when lie Was seized with the fatal disease. Capt. O'Brien had followed the vocation of niariner up to three rears ago, wLFn he retired from sailing; and had charge of the light -House at this port. He was a loving husband and father, of a kindly and genial disposition which made him -popular -with all with whom he associated. He .eaves a widow, two sons and a drtughter. A sad part of this affair is the serious illness of his son, ZVilliain, `who is very low with pneumonia,. at his own home and was unable to see his father after he was taken ill. His funen al took place on Thursday to, the R. C. cemetery, Pickering, and was largely attended. yp. Brougham. Mn. John Cowan is iudisposled these days. Owing to the severe snow -storm business is at a stand -still. T. C. Hubbard is having the in- Verior of his Hotel re -papered and painted. ,,Born —On Dlonday, Feb. 1st, the wife of •Abijah 17-orsyth, of a daughter. Agent for all ROP IIS) kinds of veh. icles inarnulticiured by the SicLaughlw Co'y, of Oshawa. 4 The Empire Medicine to, of London, Oat„ has appointed the undersigned ao local agent for Pickering, for the most son derfui dneovery of the nineteenth century. For the treatment of the` Nose, Throat, Bronchial Tubes and Lunge. It cureaColda Catarrh, Asthma, Brouchitie. Bay foyer and cii tbruat and lung disea-zes. Write for particulars, a stock of treatments and repairs constantly bn hand at. �rPess. River, Ont. Fruit Trees All kiutis of Fruit Trees, Shrubs Etc. fos sale. Highest prices paid for Fall and vVintetAApples. fONIN E' QEER Paceeyimg. 'rile �,ZTEQCI dill. Q C D D t Inamorated by net of Parllameut 074 rIcUerfna Artnnth. Autbr,rizes Cad::a1.....................CIPM.M Subscribed Cayi:el...................:• GhOJ"r9 neat....... .. .......... ...:......... ,5 Asae:e P.ca9i1' COUTertibl0............ i.G0J�sM ro Joax cvvkv. raq. ' T. H. MoILFLLA�` ehler President Bpectal attentlon given to Farmer's dale Notes .Collections solicited and promptly mado Farmer's Notes diecouuted Ameorrimn and ?ore!rn Sacbando bauaht and sold. Drsfta Is- sued, aya?lablo on all parts of tbo Vorld fsavfnes narks Dcpartment. A� /'o zF ,a _, �..,sr7 #{M,,.P ,r� .�+1 #►{1•`�'wr♦ w/ J L! �_ . R .I mast -oar 0%1 !'ira•.,.„� �,ra,.... at,)►+<l t31n f.�r;t1' «�.�;,,,,.,. )1N,i {'r., r, k 4 'f T`�+w t�lAir r1Mrv»wt� �41 tl1%t t1nA very �'rA „C"++r�,w►*r1 e..w., r• 'd.- .. tl,i R�.n t'An EM Qq*rn (� i thA fr�, S t qt1 ri+... w / / S C V" Ngr1lrle af, irr)Q ,�t.,.s, 1 ...--?'l1w qrtp resat �i,f t P 4 anion ! i+r r.� ., re -» �vrr-r� r-,�.�i o r Q A R Gi � �'wiwi. t , ztnciry night. There y, raior }, ^*►� 1I»itn a formation of ice on The lsror r, n• an txnt in aft»E� 3 �sw t, t•.. R wAtrr. and vegetable% Cv.F�.x'� �: t tllrt/R)1c�ttt tl1* ttarrl�++ta vttRPrt�ri �*t►r�iw c*��ntize,r►nt, 1•".r,�r.T .rr,�inc-.• twrticnlarly cncttcnt �n�,rid� .��1R: t"1►['�'""! » hwrv♦ pir)r , i At hie pr :.t+rev„a far. i. any in t..sli t+l+*o. Lot 13, Rear Ce 'not- sr" bring thArn to rut_ ins thw tmuc��i, t,winR t<� thr doe ThP community, was CAPt into � On tha sift t+r►wr j=rij-w, P Rioom on Monday, evenin�z � d �1ttlsRC�# w. 1wrriw Tn C1.h+�w-a F,�1� �'l�rn the mad news was circitlatn�l p� Ser, r+a a► "#in, is u Rrnim"tind that W. W. 8 rice folioesin,c T. ''_* t. l�th a ��tr-aP p�+rlce met inmtant . �4ioin� a rona�i�derablp snrtt of death at Pickering stRtion. Hr AoRF, '�wT• A li1wra,l rwward will be bad obeen f the t his snc al sbeda ,sit Rrovrn mare, 5 ym o° 4"' to thr er 10 yrs old, h d; bre sad i*#r+o finding mama tha loading of a Wsgonof coR old, mpair of f4trrell•`7, bland returning to �" 1', H' and when this was com let p ed he mare, good work, --Fn+d Rlrhar•d*on has pnrchas- orff for hie home a nto him anto F n Ata►rted •d: 8betland pony, ! a rtww farts tractor. 1!{, C Ray, Frenchman's lta�swell. TrLR of the ba" line, hall also cam intercepted Am the station s and several R-Potted rowerbred .' k"sd • tractor in unit duringthe of the cow. bred June 22P summer. t;n uses it in plovrinR, track to the ,west he did not Pee °ra Did; 2 heifers, 2 �- bawling In grain and in fact for i theapproaching at PhckecinR talocal ° 7 1 which steer' 2 heiferp, I gr s*'y%, ng in which a team of which does stop here. Ev4debut montha old: roan br b-04ri n ie Usually need. fly calf, 8 weeks old: —Ur. Hicks was summoned to he had hebeen in deep thought IMPLRMR'.;, flue Grove on WMnesday. owin got into y10e, of the Todd Mower, nev And R I., B tracks, otherwise he would bRve t of air ��Q,4 Feect t I the death of his brother-in-law Horsley. Mr. Horde re- seen the approaching train. The 2 walking nlosi►Ft Fey In Pickering a number front wheels of the auto had - us scut let•gravel ago and was then ver °f cleared the track, when the im tired bu nealF ngr� . I�and has never since then b� ti pact came. As the train was go- r: y, new. Mo. tired bu to regain his health. g nearly siztp miles an hoatr, open buggy. steel tir; '�°^t'ived by his widow and aHeon fo ce,�as ito t was �� ek with terrific tire; �At of a!'Rea, and daughter. feet thrown about fifty "Q �,of `),,,hit, P oyg haP —Tbe ear , and Mr. Sparks' body wns of r�O le services in 9t. Andrews found Rout one hundred feet dri , 'Ohnreh on Sabbath, g pony harnew Sept-p lath, from the crossing, and in a badly ring het '+►ill be conducted by the pastor fir. Dr. Marsh. the for the his skull wnas t crn. The to y s;"vnR of ►� wr Manias will be '• P of Atin��t 12 tons of mixes The Blessed dislocated �• his neck of h^'rieY, &"Kl h,,,,,h. ,,, mod." and in the evening • and his right leir wma of m4nRple rfo rod, 1, great Blunders of Life." R Theme "The broken in two places and him body t "r"'t"' rna• lc,np. i'erticee Will be interesting and DrMcG McGillivray bruised. rr►rla long. t; Coroner q,1Rnt.itgof furnftlrrvs `telpfol—the evening especially he ordered the remas ains rnotified and IItable for youmR men and C. H. Buring's Uederte►kinoved to mhr,r"ls" grain bar*. h R►omen. Good music at both tier. nth"r ,, r, ; -ices. until an inquest could be heldr Camrnia.l� h„P . —�[rs. R. G. Qal9ert has just re- ,On Tuesday a jury was em nnel P"'�rychtng rriit pw vr- . 'aired the following from Major went to the #eons od. After ftt� �r they s�La' �T . 'W f'• from France : where they found the ari a"nt. Every rttearp 'Dd►r Madam : I had the Pleasure heap of ruins. II�r RraAn r 'sf being informed to in a *t)m* .r►f «ltt.,,,I 4evecal witnasq�p* amnunt R rn""f►e •..,, by Col. Sam were examined, but as thn Grand cn l►arriw. �aarpe thatyoarboy, RQgene, has Trunk RoLilwap wisrhwd t„ �.•een formally awarded the Mili- n nt.. preeen tad by rouse' % d i n ,,,. t tit• . f> r r ,. f`�r7► Modal for Dons icnons brave- wel, � rued jvnrnwl a n to 1 1. 9+ c►n Under#Wkntrymost trying day next, in th" dftftth of !�€ r .. ," mstaneee. Please accept mTh f tolatione." p y Spark!+, i!nlr in anf !`"' ±? His namerotar+ serronnriir „ [ �l th" '- ends in Pickerin [ c . n t rr ,, �,,, ,. , �IrFAr,rlt.,n wt,..1.. R. 1114(1, nnib► w f►r,owf In.� � _ � f wi a . IMAGE NOT AVAILABLE