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1911 Courtship: July 23 Dear Noah

7/16/2013

 
Picture
Ethel is still in Huntsville, and Uncle John is working up in North Bay.
Picture
1910 On the Mountain looking across Huntsville to Lake Vernon by Nerlich & Co., Toronto. Courtesy of The Baldwin Room at www.torontopubliclibrary.ca
In this week's letter, Ethel mentions watching the steamboats (see Genealogy Notes for pics), as well as going up "up on the Mountain".  The postcard above shows what Ethel would have seen when she looked westward. On the postcard below Ethel would have stood above the steep rocky wall to see the view in the above image because that's where the 'Huntsville Lookout' is located, up on the hill they called 'the Mountain'.

Picture
1910 Huntsville from the Public School looking east toward the Mountain with Fairy Lake in the distance by H. Booth, Huntsville. Courtesy of The Baldwin Room at www.torontopubliclibrary.ca
Author of Letter: Ethel Isabell Nelson, age 21 (born 31 May 1890)
Dated:  July 23rd, 1911 
Addressed to: My Dearest Noah (Noah Clement Draper, Grand Coulee, Sask.)
Mailed  from:  Huntsville, Ont. 
Relationship:  Courting
Profession:  Farmer's Daughter  
Writing  instrument: Fine point  pen, black ink
Written on: Off-white, beautifully textured, linen-like paper, 9 inches x 7 inches, folded in half with a blue forget-me-not motif. This is standard early 20th century notepaper, pre-folded in booklet form. Ethel has written on the pages in booklet form however, she's written the inside straight across the widest part so there are only 3 unnumbered pages.

People/places mentioned in this letter:

- Aunt Sarah - *Sarah Elizabeth Glover, sister of Ethel's ma 
- Uncle John - *John Winter, husband of Aunt Sarah
- **Mrs. Rigler - Genealogy Note #2
- *Elva Mitchell 
- Mrs. Winter - a relative of Uncle John ?
- Miss Gall
- May/Mae Anderson & Stanley *Mahoney 
- *Lennox 

Places/things mentioned in this letter:
- *Huntsville
- *North Bay - north of Huntsville
- **Steamboats:  S.S. Ramona and S.S. Wa Wa

Legend: 
* Look under the Categories/Labels in the right side column for more posts on this 
  person/place/thing. If you don't see a label, use the search box at the top of page.
** see Genealogy Notes below

Picture
 Huntsville, July 23, 11.
My Dearest Noah, -
                                     Well I missed your
letter this week. but thot perhaps you
sent it to Belhaven. there will be an
anxious girl until she gets one, I 
havent got a letter from home either
since I came up here. Aunt Sarah is
writing to Uncle John he is away up to
North Bay working in a mill. I hope you never have to go away off from home to
work. for I can imagine just how it would
be, I think I ought to know a little, "eh"

Picture
when my best friend living is miles and miles away. But for the
meeting some day.     Well Thrusday was Lennoxs picnic. and I see
by the paper that they had a big time.  They presented Lennox with
a life size oil painting of himself. Be an awful thing for him to look
at, "eh", Are you Conservative or Reformer? I am for the right party.
The fire Tournament is to be here in huntsville on Aug 3rd.
I guess we will be to that all right. I was telling uncle Johns
that Mrs Rigler was married, and they wanted me to ask you
her name and address. So that they can write to her &
congratulate her.  We are expecting company sometime this afternoon
a Mrs Winter & a Miss Gall is coming in,
Suppose you will be having a great old time when the Worlds
Fair starts at Regina. I guess the fair would be all the people could
talk about now? "eh" The day of our raising some girls were at me,
wanting to know when I was to be married. I told them in Sept (ha) May
Anderson was one of the girls so I ask her the same old question and
she said in August. Stanley & May are to be married in the spring (haha)

Picture
Well it is just 1 week yesterday since I
came up here. and I got a return ticket
so I guess I will stay until that runs out.
Oh, Noah you want to write often.
I guess you think I am a impatient
kid, it is rather lonesome sometimes.
Was down town last night, & think I will
go to-morrow night also. Will go untill
I get some mail. What has become
of Elva I wrote to her some time ago &
she has never answered. The big boats are running here everyday. The Ramona
went out this afternoon. I have been
down to the Wa Wa, and have been up on 
the Mountain, - will send you a picture 
postcard of them soemday. Will close 
With all love from Your Friend & Lonesome
& Loving Sweetheart. Write, - x x x x x x x x x x



Genealogy Notes

Two Genealogy Notes this week:
#1 - Muskoka Steamers Ramona & Wa Wa
#2 - Finding Mrs. Rigler


Genealogy Note 1: Muskoka Steamers Ramona & Wa Wa

In this week's letter, Ethel mentions the big boats - the steamers Ramona and Wa Wa. It took some doing, but I finally found an image of the SS Ramona of Huntsville...and yes, although it's not as big as Ethel made it sound,  it is bigger than an Uncle John's rowboat...

Picture
S.S. Ramona, Courtesy of the Orillia Public Library
I also found two textual references to the Ramona, the first of which says, "...ships such as the flagship Algonquin (1906-1927) and the Ramona transported goods and people from Portage to Huntsville, and all points between." (Courtesy of www.muskokariverx.com)

And on Wikipedia I found a steamboat chart for the Huntsville and Lake of Bays Transportation Company (HLBTC) which has this notation:  
    S.S. Dortha, 1894, HLBTC, Lake of Bays, Renamed the Ramona in 1908

Unfortunately a search for an image of the SS Dortha didn't bring up any results.

That left the S.S. Wa Wa, as Ethel mentioned, although this steamer proved even harder to locate than the Ramona. One clue was a reference in passing that the Wa Wa berthed at the dock of the Wa Wa Hotel in Lake of Bays, not far from Huntsville. My research was hampered by the fact that the Wa Wa Hotel burned down in 1923, so what happened to the steamer? 

And then I found this photo at the Virtual Museum of Canada.
Picture
1922 - Steamer Wa Wa at Royal Muskoka Wharf on Lake Rosseau, Ontario. Courtesy of the Virtual Museum of Canada: Up in Flames: The History of Fire in Muskoka Region
So although I can't find it written - yet - it appears that after the hotel burned down, the S.S. Wa Wa was bought by someone in Lake Rouseau and used to ferry passengers back and forth to the Royal Muskoka alone, or to other points on the lake as well. 

There is a final note to this story... this research triggered a memory about a souvenir folder of postcards I found in Ethel's treasure box. The postcards are all together accordian-style and feature the Bigwin Inn which sprang up beside the Wa Wa Hotel in Lake of Bays. I won't display the postcards here because we don't have room to discuss the Bigwin Inn here, however, the souvenir folder is from Noah and Ethel's daughter, Midge, and was posted in 1944 when she went up to the District of Muskoka. And it's Midges's note that relates to this week's post...

Picture
Hello Everyone. -
                       We were over to Bigwin this
afternoon, so I got this folder to send to
you. - it certainly is a grand place, - the
Bigwin Dock is where the Wa Wa used to
be, - the Wa Wa burnt down abut 1919
or around there somewhere, - about 15 lost
their life, - Bigwin is on an island.
                        We went up to the tower today, - you
certainly get a grand view from up there, -
you can see miles.
                                  So long. - love. Midge.



Genealogy Note #2 - Finding Mrs. Rigler

In this week's letter, Ethel asks Noah for the newly married Mrs. Rigler's name and address so that Uncle John can write and congratulate her. 

It made sense that Noah would know because his sister, Ethel Maud married William Albert Rigler, and it's at their house where Noah stayed before the weather was warm enough for him to move down the road and camp on his own land - which he's doing now that his house is being built. 

What didn't make sense, however, was that Uncle John would ask for Mrs. Rigler's new name and address because his own mother, Nancy Maria, was a Rigler before she married his father, Reuben Winter. However, if the marriage was recent and in the North Gwillimbury area, then perhaps the news hadn't reached Huntsville yet. 

Although I could have peeked at the upcoming letters for Noah's answer, I decided to research on my own in case I discovered more history about John's family which is very sparse. Here's my research path:

I have 8 Mrs Rigler's posted on our family tree and there are probably more because we only list the branch relating to Ethel Maud Draper's marriage to William Albert Rigler on 25 Dec 1901. I started by bringing up the Rigler Family View on my laptop screen so that at a glance I could see who had died prior to 1911. Sadly, Uncle John's own mother died 3 yrs after his birth. Of the ones that were left, I looked at their profiles to see if anyone had married in 1911 - and drew a blank.

In another tab on my browser, I pulled up the index for the Ontario newspapers online website and searched for Rigler and then 1911. Lots of news, but no marriage. 

I reread what Ethel had written and it dawned on me that if Mrs. Rigler married and had a new name, then Rigler hadn't been her maiden name, but that of her husband. Yes, it makes sense, but it really hadn't clicked before. Knowing that, I began to search the Family View for a Mrs. Rigler whose husband had died prior to 1911. 

And there it was... As I just mentioned, Uncle John's mother was Nancy Maria Rigler and her brother was Albert William Rigler. If the name sounds familiar, it's because he was the father of  Ethel Maud's husband, William Albert Rigler.

Albert Wm died in 1904 leaving his widow - 49 yr old Mary Elizabeth Breckon aka Mrs. Rigler, 15 yr old Joseph, and 8 yr old Ernest at home since the other children, including our Will, had left home already. 

My search on Mary E. Breckon found another marriage record for her... 
Bride: Mary Rigler of Newmarket, 63, widow, daughter of Joseph Breckon
Groom:  Robert Sibley of Newmarket, 67, widower, son of John Sibley
Marriage: 22 May 1911 in St. Catharines, Lincoln County, Ontario

So, Ethel is asking Noah about Mrs. Rigler because Mary E Breckon is the mother-in-law of Noah's sister. I think part of that was also because the marriage occurred way down in Southern Ontario and The Newmarket Era didn't have any details, which is strange for a community newspaper.

I hope the above research encourages you to try your own paths of discovery.

Courtship Letter Special: July 20 From Ma & Sadie

7/7/2013

 
Picture
The Massey Harris binder about to start cutting the wheat. Courtesy of wikipedia.
In this week's letter, Ethel's ma tells Ethel that Pa bought a new binder and already has some wheat cut. This was necessary since their old binder burned in their barn fire.  Although the above photo shows a binder pulled by a tractor, in 1911 Ethel's pa would use horses to pull his binder which would cut the wheat, tie a string about a bunch of stalks to bind them in a sheaf, then drop the sheaves by the side where someone would come along and stand them in stooks or shooks to dry. The shape allowed the rain to slide off.

Author of Letter: Ida Amelia Glover Nelson and Sadie Nelson
Dated:  July 20th, 1911 
Addressed to: Dear Ethel (Ethel is up in Huntsville, Ontario visiting Ida Amelia's sister, Sarah Elizabeth Glover)
Mailed  from:  Belhaven, Ont. 
Relationship:  Ethel's ma,  and Ethel's 16 yr old sister
Profession:  Farm Family 
Writing  instrument: Blue Ink
Written on: Off-white, beautifully textured, linen-like paper, 9 inches x 7 inches, folded in half. Two notepapers, one with a pansy motif, the other with a forget-me-not motif. 

People/places mentioned in this letter:

- *Christie - Christine Maud Nelson - Ethel and Sadie's 6 yr old sister
- Crouders - *Crowders 
- *Noah Draper - Ethel's fiance out on the Canadian prairies
- *Elva Mitchell - see Special Letter of July 15 as well as Label list
- Pa - *James Henry Nelson
- Grandma - *Eliza Crouch Nelson in Aikens, Benton, Iowa, USA
- Aunt Lill - Lillian Maria Blizzard married to Pa's cousin, James A. Nelson- **Sarah - *Sarah Elizabeth Glover, sister of Ethel's ma 
- Theao Ralston
- Francis Slingerland
- Edna, Wilmot, Gertie, and Lottie 
- Sweets and Thompsons
- Gertie and Walt Brooks
- Nancy 
- Perry Morton 

Legend: 
* Look under the Categories/Labels in the right side column for more posts on this 
  person/place/thing. If you don't see a label, use the search box at the top of page.
** see Genealogy Notes below
Picture
Page 1 - Written by Ethel's ma, Ida Amelia Glover
Belhaven July 20. 1911
Dear Ethel.
got your letter tuesday
I suppose you are going
to the picnic. we are
staying at home having 
a good time watching the 
people go by Crouders just
went by in a buss it is Just
1/2 past 9 oclock. I washed tuesday
Sadie and Christie went picking
berries got 2 quarts we had 7
men tuesday. yesterday Just

Picture
Page 2 - Written by Ethel's ma, Ida Amelia Glover
2
our own men and J and
your pa went to theao
Ralstons raising and I
got the sick head ache
came home and went to 
bed. there was only about
50 men and 15 women
and some kids. they had
a nice supper but I couldnt
eat any they were very
clever with me. and there 
was Noah Draper from
the west there.  when I heard
them peeking about Noah
you bet I did some squinting
untill i saw him but it
wasnt tall Noah.

Picture
Page 3 - written by Sadie
3
Ma is getting to be a 
regular gad about
since you went away
She has been away
nearly everyday. Tuesday
was the only day she
stayed home. Christie
wants us to tell you
that she can comb her
hair. I have got two
cards and you got
a letter from Elva
and pa got one from
grandma. I am having
a fine time since you 
went away. Francis
Slingerland came here

Picture
Page 4 - written by Sadie
4
Sunday after dinner
and stayed until
after nine at night
Edna, Wilmot, Gertie
and Lottie have been
here. I was down to
Sweets and Thompsons.
The rigs are just stringing
along here to the picnic.
There has been an awful
lot go. Mine hasn't come
yet but will be here soon.
Gertie was here last
night and Walt Brooks
walked home with her.
Ma is going to see how
Aunt Lill is if she can

Picture
Page 5 switches to Ethel's ma where she writes, "Well Sadie has been spinning yarns..."
5
over the 'phone
She did and she
is better. We have
got beets and
beans on for
dinner and we
are going to have
green apples for
supper. (Don't your
mouth water?) We have
got liver too for dinner.
well Sadie has been
spinning yarns I was
to Crouders 1/2 a hour was
not in house and to

Picture
Page 6 - written by Ethel's ma
6
Nancies about 3/4 hours
took her nives home
well i must quit
this and get to work
perry Morton is working 
here to day Christie
has got to go to 
belhaven for salt
for dinner.
Sadie has got the blues every rig goes
by it makes her worse
there was a big storm 
yesterday. we have got
our new Binder set
up and one piece
of wheat cut

Picture
Page 7 - written by Ethel's ma
7
well my head aches
and i dont feel
very good wish
i could scribble
some more. but i
must quit   how 
is Sarah hope she
is better  did you get
a return tickit if
you did you will have to come
in a month for it is only good
for a month unless you got
if for longer. say you 
write soon for i get
the blues once in a while.
Sadie is looking bad she is
holding her mouth on one side
she looks so cross.

Picture
Page 8 - written by Sadie
Ma wants to know
if we can set the old
hen behind the bee boxes
If so how soon? How
many eggs do you
think she can cover.
It is the grey hen that
has a red feather for
a collar. They have
got the barn boarded
in and the floor
nearly all laid. As we
can't afford to waste
any more paper over
you we will have to quit 
Write soon
                    Ma and Sadie

Genealogy Notes

Genealogy Note 1: Update on Fred Coventry's Sister in Alberta

Update to Louie and Fred Coventry going to visit his sister in Alberta which Noah mentioned in his last letter in 1911 Courtship: July 19 Dear Ethel... we have a new development. While researching the Coventry family and trying to find out what happened to Louie (Noah's sister), I hit a newspaper goldmine on the usual ourontario.ca website I use for the Newmarket Era except this time, I've discovered the Halton News which encompasses the Acton Free Press and Georgetown Herald. 

The Coventry family came from the Halton area of Peel Country, Ontario and the newspapers covered many of their social events. One of the first items I discovered was a wedding announcement for Maggie Coventry aka Margaret Jane Coventry and a Mr. W. T. Campbell.
Picture
Acton Free Press (Acton, ON), 1 Aug 1901, p. 2
CAMPELL-COVENTRY - At the residence of the Bride's parents, Kenlis, Assa., on Wednesday, 10th July 1901, by Rev. A. Robson, Mr. W. T. Campell to Miss Maggie Coventry, daughter of David Coventry.

From the same newspapers I've found the obituary for Fred's father, David Coventry, as well as the brief announcement on Louie's death. They are both almost illegible due to the inking process and I need to decipher them. However, I've read enough to know that David Coventry's daughter, Mrs. W. T. Campbell (Margaret Jane) lives in Vancouver, BC and his other daughter, Mrs. C. F. Powell, lives in Alberta. So it's not Maggie in Alberta, but rather Mary Catherine whom I thought stayed in Ontario. (I've updated last week's Genealogy Note 1)


Genealogy Note 2 - The Lennox Picnic

Can't you just picture 16 yr old Sadie in this week's letter as she stands by the door watching all the rigs and outfits (autos and conveyances) filled with excited people as they make their way to the Lennox Picnic? 

I love the part where Ethel's ma writes on page 7, "Sadie is looking bad she is holding her mouth on one side she looks so cross."
For more info on the Lennox Picnic, check the Genealogy Note 3 on July 2: Dear Noah. Here is a news article about the post 1911 Lennox Picnic:

Picture
The Newmarket Era. July 28, 1911 - Page: 5, Part 1
That's 15,000 people attending the Conservative Party's annual picnic and a good portion of those people drove right past the Nelson farm where Sadie stood by the door watching them go by. No wonder she felt she was missing out. 

However, other snippets tell of pickpockets in the crowd, as well as people coming home with empty pockets due to buying the refreshments. Many people commented that their neighbors either got home late and loud, or didn't get home until the next day. By most accounts, it sounds more like a 'liberal' party than a 'conservative' one. 
Picture
The Newmarket Era. July 28, 1911 - Page: 5, Part 2

1911 Courtship: July 19 Dear Ethel

7/1/2013

 
Picture
Reaping, Indian Head, Assiniboia, on Canadian Pacific Railway. c1886. Prairie Postcards PC002464. Courtesty of http://peel.library.ualberta

See the Genealogy Note at the bottom of this post for more info on the above photo and the Experimental farm, mentioned by Noah in this letter. 

Author of Letter: Noah Clement Draper (24 yrs old)
Dated: July 19th/1911
Addressed to: Miss E. Nelson, My Dear Ethel (21 yrs old)
Mailed from:  Grand  Coulee, Sask
Relationship: Courting
Profession: Farmer 
Writing instrument: Fine point pen, Black ink, but looks blue-grey in places 
Writing Paper: Thick, textured, linen-like paper, 9 inches x 6.5 inches. Paper is folded in half, written on front and back like a book, but inside, paper is turned sideways and written across short length and down both pages. 

People/Places mentioned in this letter:
- *Joe & Eva - Joe Perrault and Eva Amelia - Noah's sister
- *Parthena - wife of Noah's brother, *Percy Draper
- Parthena's baby - Royden Wallace Draper b Jul 1911 but what date?
 - *Stewart Draper, Noah's cousin, in Indian Head, Saskatchewan
- *Louie:  Noah's sister, Sarah Louisa Nelson, married to Fred Coventry
- Fred's sister in Alberta - Probably Margaret Jane *Coventry

* Regina, Saskatchewan
** Experimental Farm, Indian Head, Saskatchewan
Local - Twice daily passenger train that runs from Regina to Indian Head. Used for excursions such as field trips to see the world famous Bell Farm, etc. 

* Look under the Categories/Labels in the right column for more on posts on the above people.
**More info under Genealogical Notes

Picture
Grand Coulee, Sask
               July 19th/11
Miss. E. Nelson,
        huntsville. Ont.
My Dear Ethel;-
     Received your letter last
week and was glad to hear
you were going to get a few
holidays & hope you have
a good time,
     Well we are good and buisy
here just now. just got
the cellar cemented and am
now digging a drain. expect 
the well diggers and carpenters
tomorrow. so will have 7 men
here for a while and a girl
if I can get one but they are

Picture
like hens teeth few and far between. 
    Joe. Eva. & I were down to the
experimental farm at Indian Head
yesterday. I went into Regina on 
the morning Local with out any
intentions of going down but I got
through with my business by
the time the excurtion train
came along so I jumped on and
went down. it rained nearly all
afternoon. but we hired a livery
rig and got out to Stewarts before
it started so we didnt mind
it. but there was a good many.
dissapointed people on the train
coming home.
     Osay Ethel Parthena has a baby 
boy. about a week old have not seen
it yet but i hear it looks like
the Drapers. Ha. Ha.
     Louie & Fred went up to his
sisters in Alberta last Saturaday.
to pick raspberries. they said but
I guess they wont get many.
     Say you must be getting old to
be able to say the heat is the worst
for a 100 years back. Eh.

Picture
I hear it has been very dry
down there this summer how
do the crops seem. they are
very good here only a little late
but we have had such a
cold summer we will likely
have a hot fall. hope so
any way.
     Well it is getting nearly
time to get out to work again
am writing this at noon
and expect to post this to 
night. Well i guess this is
all for this time so Bye Bye
write soon and a long letter
to your Western Lover. N.C.D.
X X X X X X X 


Genealogy Notes

Genealogy Note 1: Margaret Jane Coventry

Fred Coventry had 2 sisters. Mary Catherine stayed in Ontario, married, and died there. 

But Margaret Jane is shown on the 1901 census where she and her parents are living in Kenlis, Assiniboia - about 10 miles northeast of Indian Head. She is not with them on the 1916 census, though, where they have moved close to Fred and Louie near Grand Coulee. Did Margaret Jane marry and move to Alberta? Or did she just move there because of a job opportunity?

Update! 
- Mary Catherine did NOT marry and die in Ontario - her Aunt Catharine did. In 1911, Mary Catherine and her husband lived in Strathcona, Alberta. 
- Margaret Jane moved to Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada  sometime between 1916 and 1920. She didn't show up on the 1916 census because it was a special one for the prairie provinces only so that the government could keep track of immigrants on the newly opened prairie land.


Genealogy Note 2: The Experimental Farm

The Experimental Farm had it's beginnings as part of the 
53,000 acre Bell Farm which started operations in 1882 by the Qu'Appelle Valley Farming Company - before the railroad tracks had been laid on the bald prairie - before there was the town of IndianHead - and before Saskatchewan became a province, which is why the postcard at the top refers to it as Indian Head, Assiniboia. Once the railroad went through, the Bell Farm built a hotel, grain elevator and flour mill and Indian Head came into being. 

Using the most modern farming practices and equipment of the time, the Bell Farm drew  interested people from several countries to see for themselves how farming had/could progress. The Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR) carried tourists and farmers on daily excursions from Regina out to Indian Head to explore the farm for the day. 

The unique round shape of the Bell Farm Round Barn was one of the main attractions of the Bell Farm. Due to having its silo in the centre of the building, the layout provided ample space to stable 36 horses surrounding the silo - a time-saver when it came to supplying feed for the hard-working heavy horses. 

Picture
Stable, Major William R. Bell's farm, Indian Head, SK, 1884, by William McFarlane Notman. VIEW-1388 © McCord Museum
In 1887, part of the Bell Farm was sold to create a Dominion Experimental Farm - one of Canada's first agricultural stations. 


Picture
Experimental farm, Indian Head, SK, about 1920, MP-0000.25.431, © McCord Museum
A lasting legacy of the Indian Head area is the tree nursery located one mile south of the town which had been established in 1897 to supply trees for shelterbelt purposes to cut down on wind erosion. Called the Prairie Shelterbelt Program, the nursery of the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Administration  (PFRA) supplied seedlings free of charge to all legitimate homesteaders and farmers. 

Although The Shelterbelt Program ended in the Spring of 2013, the PFRA tree nursery is a showcase of tree varieties which is open to the public and a favorite spot for summer picnics as well as information gathering.

Picture
Image of a man holding a cloth sack and picking something off of a tree - possibly at PFRA tree nursery. Courtesy of http://saskhistoryonline.ca/fedora/repository/indianhead%3A31270
According to the Indian Head History Page by 1902, the Town of Indian Head was incorporated and had become "...one of the world's largest initial shipping points for wheat." 
Picture
1900-1909 Image of ten grain elevators at Indian head that read "Jos Glen No. 1", "Jos Glen No. 2", "Dominion Elevator Co. Ltd. No. 72", "Ogilvie's No. 67" - various structures in between elevators, Canadian Pacific railroad cars next to elevators - man and several cows in foreground on other side of fence. Photographer: Denison Indian Head. Courtesy http://saskhistoryonline.ca/fedora/repository/indianhead%3A31195
And that's the history of Indian Head, Saskatchewan, which Noah mentions in this week's letter and which has been mentioned several other times when talking about Elva Nelson and Will Mitchell, and Stewart Draper and Bertha Hamilton. 

1911 Courtship: July 16 Dear Noah

6/24/2013

 
Picture
1914-1916 Looking west on Main St Huntsville, Muskoka District, Ontario, Canada. Courtesy of Huntsville Public Library and ourontario.ca

Ethel is finally in Huntsville!


Author of Letter: Ethel Isabell Nelson, age 21 (born 31 May 1890)
Dated:  July 16th, 1911 
Addressed to: Dear Noah (Noah Clement Draper, Grand Coulee, Sask.)
Mailed  from:  Huntsville, Ont. 
Relationship:  Courting
Profession:  Farmer's Daughter  
Writing  instrument: Fine point  pen, blue ink
Written on: Off-white, beautifully textured, linen-like paper, 9 inches x 7 inches, folded in half with a red carnation motif. This is standard early 20th century notepaper, pre-folded in booklet form. Ethel has written on the pages in order from 1 to 4. 


People/places mentioned in this letter:

- Uncle John - **John Winter - husband of *Sarah Elizabeth Glover, sister of Ethel's ma 
- Pa -  *James Henry Nelson
- Mr & Mrs. Taylor - Huntsville residents
- Mrs Bradley - Huntsville resident
- **Chris Willoughby
- *Elva Mitchell - see last weeks Genealogy Notes as well as Label list 
- Mr John Warriner (Ethel spells it Warner) (John Warriner died recently)

- **Huntsville
- *Washago - south of Huntsville
- *North Bay - north of Huntsville

Legend: 
* Look under the Categories/Labels in the right side column for more posts on this 
  person/place/thing. If you don't see a label, use the search box at the top of page.
** see Genealogy Notes below


Picture
                     Huntsville.
                                          July 16. 1911.
               Dear Noah:- 
                                    Rec'd your letter
on Griday as luck would have
it. "eh" Glad you are still so
you can be hard at it. Well
here I am way up here. I left
home yesterday about half past
seven. and got here about
half past three. Uncle John was. 

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2. 
at the station to meet me.
he had a row boat there. and
so I had a good boat ride first
of all. The thing I like best of all.
Nothing i like better but to be
on the water.
        We had our barn raising
on Tuesday. Everything went
along fine. About 150 were
there, Pa did the framing
himself. Mr John Warner was
to have done it.
        Greatest old place here for 
a good time. Uncle John will
keep you laughing all the time
The river is just about 20 rods
from their door. The boats are

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3.
running all the time Sundays too.
Hav'nt been out any where
to-day. Mr & Mrs Talyor are
coming here to-night and a
Mrs Bradley is here now. but
I would like to see someone a
great deal better. "eh"
Say i certainly would not
want to live down near
Washago. Yesterday when I
was coming up. of all the old
Shacks we passed. I don't
know how many families
were living in onehouse. Uncle
John was telling that up to North
Bay. there is 2 families living
in 1 hut about 8x10. (haha)
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4.
Aunt Sarah is just talking about our
fire, it reminds me did I ever tell you
how. how we heard our barn was
fired. Some one said Manuel was
trying to set a hens tail afire. Iguess
that hen would run some "eh".
Mr Chris Willoughby was to our place
the day of our raising. he said he saw
Elva Mitchell while he was up West.
was he up to your place. He says there
is a lot of bachelors up there and
they want him to ship up a car
load. he said he wanted me to
go when he had some more girls
ready. He's quite a joker, "eh". Well
you were defeated "eh" Say you said
they won that time you did nt go
I wonder if you had better stay at
home next time. "ha ha" Oh you know
me, dont you don't think of anything I say.
Goodbye from your lonesome Sweetheart.
I'd love to see you just now. Ethel xxxxxxxx

Genealogy Notes

There are 2 Genealogy Notes this week.

Genealogy Note 1: Uncle John and Aunt Sarah

Ethel is staying in Huntsville in the District of Muskoka at the house of her ma's sister, Sarah Elizabeth Glover who married John Thomas Winter  in 1901. John and Sarah lost one son in 1906 a week after his 1st birthday. The doctor wrote on the death record that he "never did well in life. Just failed to thrive and didn't grow." In 1911 Uncle John and Aunt Sarah have  9 yr old Ernest,  and 1 yr old Mabel.

Picture
Ethel left Newmarket (south of Belhaven) at 7:30 am and rode the train to Huntsville, arriving at 3:30 pm.
Uncle John Thomas Winter was the son of Reuben Winter and Nancy Maria Rigler. If you think the name Rigler sounds familiar, you're right. Over in Saskatchewan, Noah's sister, Ethel Maude, married Will of the same Rigler family. 

Uncle John's grandparents, John Winter and Jane Gilbert were in their mid-twenties when they left Lincolnshire, England in 1851 and emigrated to Canada with their infant son, Reuben. They stopped in York County, Ontario and had 5 more children. 

In 1868, the Free Grants and Homestead Act of 1868 passed into law which opened up the District of Muskoka to settlement. The 1881 Canada census shows Uncle John's grandparents and their children as residents of Muskoka. Since latter Census records show them living in the village of Huntsville in Chaffey Township, I went looking for a map.

Picture
Partial map of Chaffey Township, District of Muskoka, Ontario, Canada. Orange squares belong to Winter. Orange circle is Huntsville train depot.
A n 1879 map similar to the above shows 3 homesteads with the Winter name which I've outlined in orange. The double lot above Fairy Lake belonged to Jane Winter (John's grandmother), and the 2 on the top right belonged to Reuben Winter and William Winter. However, I don't know if the Winter family still owned those lots in 1911.

Uncle John picked Ethel up at the Huntsville train depot and they took a rowboat to Aunt Sarah's. But where did they live? Jane Winter's land is close, but the blue lines which designate water routes are mere streams. Reuben's and William's land has a great river route, but it's about 15 miles from Lake Vernon - not including all the twists and turns - which seems way too far for Uncle John and Ethel's rowboat. 


Genealogy Note 2 - Chris Willoughby

Ethel wrote that Chris Willoughby, a friend of the family, was at her pa's barn raising and he said he saw Elva Mitchell while out west. Here's what I discovered about this man who teased Ethel about shipping her out west with a carload of girls...

Chris Willoughy and his wife, Lois were farmers in North Gwillimbury until they retired in 1901. But Lois died in 1908 leaving Chris alone at 78 years of age. When the census was taken in June 1911, Chris is found boarding near Indian Head, Saskatchewan which is where he saw Elva Mitchell.

Chris is listed as a farmer on the census, but he seems to be a recruiter for the prairie farmers who were scrambling for workers to harvest one of the biggest grain crops in Canadian history. 

Although I couldn't find a newspaper notice or obituary on Chris, I found his death record that shows he died on Sep 19th, 1913 in Keswick, Ontario after suffering 2 months of gangrene.

I don't know about you, but the story of Chris Willoughby and his lonely demise just makes me sad.
   


Courtship Letter Special: July 15 From Elva Mitchell

6/18/2013

 


Picture
Indian Head, Saskatchewan, Canada, looking North, ca 1909. Courtesy of the SCAA Virtual Exhibits Mainstreet Images. http://scaa.usask.ca/gallery/mainstreet/main.html
Sorry about last week's missing letter. I've decided to put Eliza Crouch Nelson's letter aside for now and I've posted an explanation as **Genealogy Notes #4 below as to why. 

This week's letter is another special one - this time by Elva Jane Mitchell, cousin to Ethel since their mothers are sisters.

Author of Letter: Elva Mitchell, age 24 (Ethel's cousin)
Dated:  July 15, 1911
Addressed to: Ethel Isabell Nelson, age 21
Mailed  from:  Indian Head, Saskatchewan
Relationship:  1st cousins (mothers are sisters)
Profession:  Farm worker's wife  
Writing  instrument: Fine point  pen, Blue ink
Written on: Cream-colored, slightly thick, unlined writing paper, 5 inches x 8 inches. This letter seems straightforward with page 1, 2 and 3, however it's not quite that cut-and-dry. At the top of page 3, Elva has written, "3. the first one" although I don't know what that's about.


People/Places mentioned in on Page 1, 2 and 3 of this letter:

- *Elva -  Elva Jane Nelson and husband, Will Mitchell 
- Mrs Draper (pg 1) - *Bertha Hamilton, wife of *Stewart Draper, of Indian Head
- Norma - **Norma Draper, 7 yr old daughter of Bertha and Stewart
- *Lennox's Picnic - see the Genealogy note on  July 2 Dear Noah
- Roy Cowieson and wife (Roy's wife, Lavina, is the daughter of William Rye and Hartie Draper - 2nd cousin to Noah)
- Ernie Glover - Ethel's 1st cousin (Ethel's mom, Ida, is sister to Ernie's dad, William)
- Jim Philps/Phillips (Ernie eventually married a Phillips)
- Ethel's Aunt Mary - Mary Ann *Glover, sister of Ida, and wife of William *Linstead of Sintaluta, Sask (about 10 miles from Indian Head)
- Mrs Draper (pg 2) - Noah's mom, *Sarah Sophia Deverell, in Grand Coulee, Sask
- Uncle Jim - *James Nelson, Ethel's dad
- Fathers - **George Caleb Nelson (Elva's father who was on his 3rd wife in 1911) 
- Uncle - possible Emanuel since he was very sick in an earlier letter
 - Miss Hunt - still haven't discovered the identity of this gentle spinster

- *Indian Head, Saskatchewan - 1 town (about 10 miles) west of Sintaluta on Hwy #1 
-  Sintaluta, Saskatchewan - 34 miles north of our farm

Legend:
*Look under the Categories/Labels in the right column for more on posts on this person.
**see Genealogy Notes below


Picture
                 Indian Head July the 15.1911
Miss Ethel Nelson.
           Belhaven.
                   My. Dear. Cousin.
                          Received your welcome
letter a short time ago we are well
hope this to find you folks all the
same. Ethel this is Saturday
afternoon well Ethel this is Saturday
but a week later. it is Just a lovely
day. Mr's Draper is getting supper.
she came home on Wednesday.
morning she has been away for
6 weeks up to the home stead
Norma and I are going to town
to night Mrs Draper Just has
2 children the same two
that she had down East.
But they are big youngester's now

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                                            2.
Well have you folks got the Barn
raised yet. I suppose you will be
going to Lennox's Picnic I was there
last year but I guess I will
not be there this year. Roy
Cowieson and wife just live about
3 or 4 mile from here. I was to see
them a few sundays ago.
Ernie Glover is working for Jim
Philps. I think perhaps that 
Will and I will go over to Philps
tomorrow. Ethel I have not
been over to see your Aunt Mary
yet but will go. some of these
days. we only live about 4 mile
from the head. go in quiet
often. I have not been up to
see Mr's Draper. is she down
East yet. Well Ethel when you
come west don't for get to come

Picture
        3. the first one
and see me.
tell Uncle Jim he had better
come up West there is lots of
money up here. people I think
can do a lot better up here.
Well Ethel I can not think of much
to write this time  do you ever see
any thing of Fathers. and is Uncle better
now. is Miss Hunt married yet. and
does  Benie still go to see her.
Well Bye Bye with Love to all.
hope to here from you soon
                               Elva Mitchell
                                       Indian Head.
                                Box 142, Sask.

P.S. Please Ethel do not forgot to
put the number of the Box
142, as you other one ws in the
office for nearly 3 weeks.


Genealogy Notes

There are 4 Genealogy Notes this week.

Genealogy Note #1 - Elva Nelson and William Mitchell 

Elva Jane Nelson married William Mitchell in 1907 and sometime after they headed west. In Noah's letter of May 1 Dear Ethel, he writes, "So you did not know Elva & Will were in the West. yes they are working for Steward this summer."

Since 1911 was a census year in Canada, I thought it would be easy to confirm the above fact. Nope. I couldn't find them anywhere. Not in the East. And not in the West.  Elva is the sister of Leslie Nelson, the missing cousin, also spoken of in the May 1st letter. 

And then I couldn't find several of the names Elva mentioned  in the 1911 census - people who were all living around the Indian Head area. (see the map)  But a quick look at the census revealed an inky mess and it's a wonder anyone was able to transcribe it at all. What I had to do was find the record in Qu'Appelle's subdistrict #20 and go along page by page. That's what I did and I was on pg 13 of 28 when I found this gem:

Picture
1911 Canadian Census for William and Elva Mitchell
Whoever took down this census had the worst pen and very rough handwriting. I've highlighted 4 names in the top half of this image:
 - Rigler, Joseph (Joseph Walker Rigler)
 - Mitchell, William (Elva's husband)
 -       "        , Alva (should be Elva)
 - Linstead, Norman (Aunt Mary's boy from Sintaluta)

The problem is that whoever transcribed the image couldn't read the handwriting and so the 4 names were typed as follows (lower red box):
 - Royles, Joseph 
 - Midahild, William
 - Midahild,  Alva
 - Lumhead, Normon

No wonder the search engine didn't pick them up. One or two letters off would have been okay,  but with these errors, the names would have been at the end of thousands of records if I went by search alone. So in this case, knowing the small area to be covered and the small population of it, bypassing the search engine and checking each page was the most efficient way to get a result. Actually, I'm just thrilled I found them!

This presented another problem since, as I said above, Elva and Mitchell are working for Stewart for the summer. If so, why are they listed under Joseph Rigler  who happens to be the brother of Will Rigler, husband of Noah's sister? It seems that the 4th person mentioned in this record is 5 yr old Norman Linstead - son of William Linstead and Mary Ann Glover of Sintaluta - yes, the same as in the letter. (And yes, that makes 3 Williams in the same paragraph.)

Since Will Mitchell is listed as a laborer and not a lodger of Walker's, does that mean he's working for both Walker and Stewart? Perhaps they're next door? 

I'm not sure how little Norman fits into this if the census was recorded on June 1st and Elva's letter is July 15th, yet Elva hasn't been over to visit her Aunt Mary in Sintaluta yet. But perhaps Norman was only visiting Walker during the census taking period. 

When Elva says on Page 1, "Norma and I are going to town to night Mrs Draper Just has 2 children the same two that she had down East" I assumed she meant Norman but left off the N. But no, Bertha and Stewart have 2 children: Norma (b1904) and Lennox (b1906) - both born back in Belhaven before the family moved west. So Norma is with Elva yet I don't know if she's only visiting or if Elva's job is babysitting/child care for Bertha during the day so Bertha can take care of the men. 

Genealogy Note 2 - Elva's father, George Caleb Nelson

One more thing about Elva... she's the daughter of George Caleb Nelson which means her grandmother is Eliza Crouch Nelson of last week's missing letter. In this week's letter, she asks Ethel, "do you ever see any thing of Fathers"?

I'm not sure why she added the s at the end of fathers, but here's the story of George Caleb Nelson: 
#1 - Hannah Victoria Lantham died in Jun 1894 - mother of 5 kids including Elva
#2 - married Emma Lantham April 1895 - (Hannah's sister) Emma died Aug 1896
#3 - married Mary Tryphena Smith Jan 1897 - she died Aug 1913 
#4 - maried Mary Ellen Traviss Aug 1914 - she died May 1922
George Caleb Nelson died in 1936 having outlived his 4th and last wife. His 5 children were all from Hannah.

Perhaps with his record, she was ready for bad news at any moment.

Genealogy Note 3 - Ernie Glover

As for Ernie Glover, I found him on 2 different 1911 Canadian census records. At first I thought perhaps the censuses were recorded with a few months between them which would give Ernie time to move west, but they're both dated June 1st, 1911. Take a look  at this first one:
Picture
1911 Canada Census for Ernie/Ernest Glover living in Saskatchewan

As mentioned earlier, Ernie is found at the farm of Jim Phillips. In the upper image, he's the last one in the red box, and in the bottom image, he's the red box. 

Everything looks good. According to this letter, he's where he's been confirmed as being. So how can he be on another census? Let's take a look...
      
Picture
1911 Canada Census for Ernie/Ernest Glover living in Ontario
Okay, now it's starting to make sense because Ernie Glover on this census has been scratched out - as show in the thick red box which means he was written in then as an afterthought, they realized he was probably going to be counted out west so they scratched him out. Same goes for his sister, Georgie, in the blue box. I'm not sure where she was at the time this census was taken, but she was a 25 yr old of marrying age and I haven't found her anywhere else in the records for 1911 yet. 

One more thing about this census - the search engines will continue to find this census for Ernie because he is indexed in the transcription (the red box in the bottom image).  As long as he's there, he'll be found. Because of that, I left a note in the update option beside his name in order to save others the same grief I had while searching for him.

Genealogy Note #4 - Last week's missing letter by Eliza Crouch Nelson

As can often happen in the field of genealogy, I ran into a couple problems just prior to posting the July 14th letter from Eliza Crouch Nelson in Atkins, Ohio. The main problem was that some of the information couldn't be confirmed - or sourced. I had originally planned to post it anyway in the hopes that another 'hidden' relative would find the post and come forward with new information. However, with suspected problems on both the Nelson and Crouch side of the tree, I used last week to research - not intentionally, but one day lead to another and suddenly the week was gone. Although I've made strides, much of it is still speculation. 


So until I can confirm more details, I've put Eliza's letter aside.


And that's it for this week. Wow, what a week!
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