-------------- --------------- LAMBS OF THE LOWER OTTAWA SCOTLAND TO CANADA 1623-1936 HELENLAMBSHEARMAN 2001 -------------- --------------- TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction .................................................................................. . , 3 Abbreviations ....................................................................................... .. 4 Part I - SCOTLAND: LAMBS ALONG THE FORTH . . . . . . , ., 5 Pan H - CANADA: LANIBS ALONG TPHâE OTTAWA ........................... ,. 39 - Montreal to Lochaber Bay ....................................................... .. 39 ' James Lamb & Elizabeth McFarlane build a home on Bay Hill .... .. 45 ' Helen Lamb & John S. Edwards Family ofRockland, Ontario . 52 - William Lamb & Margaret Gordon Family of Clarence Twp. and Wendover, Ontario 58 - Margaret Lamb & John McLean Family of Osnabruck Twp. & Rideauville, Ontario ,. 63 ' Janet Lamb & Alex McLean Family of Thurso, Quebec H 64 - James Lamb & Sarah Baker Family of Lochaber Bay, Quebec . 67 ' John Lamb & Mary Dewar Family of Hawkesbury & Ottawa, Ontario 76 An Album of Family Photographs ...................................................... ,. 113 Family Charts . ............................................................................. .. 117 Bibliography 135 Index of Names .................................................................................... ,. 141 -------------- --------------- NORTH SEA Map of Scotland showing the Lands of Cowal and the Vale of Menteith, -------------- --------------- INTRODUCTION In the 19605 when the Lamb home on Carling Avenue in Ottawa was sold, my brother, Bill, saved several boxes of old photos and family documents. These roused his curiosity about the family and he began to gather other information about the Lamb family. Along the way he met and exchanged family information with several Lamb cousins including, Percy Campbell, then living in Sunderland, Ontario; Gladys Ferguson, a descendant of James Lamb (1828-1914) and Sarah Baker; and Leone Robertson, a descendant of William Lamb and Margaret Gordon, About this time, Bill wrote to the Scottish Ancestry Research Society (SARS), of Edinburgh, Scotland, requesting them to search the records in Scotland for the family of James Lamb (1778-1855) who lived near Thomhill, in Perthshire, and came to Canada in 1831. SARS found a James Lamb born in 1776 at McOrriston/Mackaurostoune, in the Parish of Kilmadock, the son of John Lamb and Mary McArthur. Although the date of Jamesâ birth differed from our information in Canada, we accepted the SARS report that his parents were John Lamb and Mary McArthur. About 1970, Bill published a summary of his ï¬ndings which he called, James lamb and His Canadian Clan. More recently I read the SARS report again and wondered why there were no daughters called Mary among the children of James Lamb and Elizabeth McFarlane. According to the almost sacred tradition in Scotland of naming their children, the second daughter should have been named aï¬er her paternal grandmother. James and Elizabeth Lambâs second daughter was named Helen, not Mary, I decided to order the microï¬lm copies of the original Old Parochial Registers (OPRs) for the parishes around Thomhill, Kilmadock, Kincardine and Port of Menteith. The OPRs begin in the 17th century and almost immediately I found Lamb families in the Parish of Kilmadock; then a family of Lambs living at Bridge End of Goodie. In the next generation, this family appeared to have moved to Borland in Ruskie, in the adjoining Parish of Port of Menteith. Here was the baptismal record of a James Lamb born in 1778, the son of John Lamb and Helen Burn. The date was right and the grandmother's name was Helen! In Scotland, a person's name not only told his/her family or clan but what position that person held within the family, The naming of children nearly always followed a simple and almost sacred nile: - The eldest son was named for his patemal grandfather; the second son for his maternal grandfather and the third son for his father. - The eldest daughter was named for her maternal grandmother; the second daughter for her paternal grandmother and the third daughter for her mother, Over time, this custom led to nicknames, which in turn oï¬en became proper names in the next generation, Helen might become Ellen, Nell or Ella; Elizabeth, Eliza, Lizzie, Beth or Betty; Margaret usually was called Maggie and Mary, Minnie. Among the sons, William became Will, Willie, Bill or Billie/Billy; James might be Jamesie, Jim or Jimmy. While this custom of naming in Scottish families, has largely died out, it was very important in earlier generations. The family surname might be a well-known clan name such as Campbell, 3 -------------- --------------- McFarlane or Stewart/Drummond, During the years of clan strife and massacres, and the Jacobite Rebellions of 1715 and 1745, many took safe surnames such as Lamb, Black, Brown or White; others took the name of the river or community where they found refuge. These safe names account for many of the septs of the various clans or great families. Our Lambs in Perthshire lived in Stewart or Drummond country, yet they brought the story of the Campbell massacre of the Lamonts in 1646 with them to Canada in 1831. It was told to succeeding generations as late as 1935, Oral history may take many twists and turns, but truth is at the heart of it. As well as family oral history, we also had three letters li'om Scotland mentioning family members and their relationship to Canadian Lambs. These names and relationships conï¬rm that our Lamb family descends ï¬om the Lambs living at Borland in Ruskie. This research lies behind the Lamb family story in Scotland described in Part I - LAMBS ALONG THE FORTH, Many cousins shared their family information that helped shape the Canadian story in Part II - LAMBS ALONG THE OTTAWA. More recently Elizabeth Waymann, a descendant of Helen Lamb and John S. Edwards, contributed much of the Edwards family story. Alvin Gallagher and Norman Macoy provided the Gallagher and Pdnervaen- Gervan-Macoy genealogies, which added more detail to this family history. Other contributors and sources of information will be found listed in the bibliography. To all I offer my thanks. Most of all, I want to express my appreciation to my husband, John, who has encouraged me again and again, and brought the ï¬nished product out of his computer, Helen Lamb Shearman Oakville, Ontario 2001 s 1 a a a a a 1 a ABBREVIATIONS b. In Scotland, refers to date of baptism in Old Parish Registers (OPRs). In Canada, refers to date of birth in Family Bibles or other family records. in Date of marriage d. Date of death. 0. or abt, ; about. Twp. : Township. Co. : County. U.C. or Upper Canada became C W. or Canada West in 1840 and Ontario in 1867. LC. or Lower Canada became CE. or Canada East in 1840 and Quebec in 1867. A name following a slash, as in William/Willie or Mary/Minnie, was the name usually used for that person. -------------- --------------- PART I - SCOTLAND LAMBS ALONG THE FORTH EARLY CONNECTIONS: The Lumonts of Cowal. 1n the 6th century, the western Highlands of Scotland, which reach southward to the northern shore of the Firth of Clyde, were settled by Celts from the northern part of Ulster, called Dalriada. These early inhabitants of the peninsulas and islands of Kintyre, Jura, Arran, Bute, and Cowal, were known as "Clann âic Fhearchair)â or MacâeracharfMacKerracher. They claimed descent from the Great House of O'Neil, kings of Ulster in earlier times, The name of Lamont appears to date from the middle of the 13th century when Lauman, a grandson of Fhearchair, was named in a charter granting lands in Kilmun and Kilï¬nnan to the monks of Paisley In time the name Lauman became Lamont, the accent on the ï¬rst syllable. William F. Skene in his book The Highlanders of Scotland says of the Lamont Clan: There is one peculiarity connected With the Lamond: (Lamonts). that although by no means a powerful clan, their genealogy can be proved by charters (legal records), at a time when most other Highland families are obliged to have recourse to the uncertain lights of tradition and the genealogies of their sennachies (oral history) ., .. The antiquity of the Lamonts could not protect them from encroachment by the powerful Campbells of Argle to the north. Gradually over several centuries, the Lamont lands were reduced to the lower part of the Cowal peninsula, When Robert the Steward/Stewart became King Robert II in 1371, one of his ï¬rst acts was to make 3 Campbell the hereditary keeper of the royal castle at Dunoon, From that time on, the Campbells used every opportunity to increase their lands in Cowal. From Lamont to Lamb. In a letter published in the Inventory of Lamont Papers, 1231-1897, the Laird of Lamont, Archibald Lamont of that Ilk, writing in 1699 to his kinsman, Bourdon/Burden of Feddal, in the parish of Ardoch) Perthshire, recounts an incident which saw the Lamonts lose more of their territory when King Robert 111 (13904406), who had succeeded his father as king, conï¬scated some of the Lamont lands and gave them to the Campbells. In the year 1400 when Robert 111 and his court were living at Rothesay Castle on the island of Bute, three young lairds of the court crossed the kyles or narrows of Bute to the Lamont territory of Cowal to hunt. On leaving they tried to take several young Lamont women with them. Hearing of this treachery, the Laird of Lamont sent four of his sons to rescue the women. In the ensuing ï¬ght, the lairds from Bute were killed. The Lamont sons were forced to ï¬ee for their lives and change their names to conceal their identity. -------------- --------------- Leï¬ - The Lamont clan badge. The motto, Ne parents nec spemas means Nerther spare nor dispose. Below - A sketch ofthe memorial at Dunoon commemorating the massacre of the Lamonts in 1646 -------------- --------------- The eldest son ï¬ed to Perthshire, seeking the protection of the Earl ofPearth/Perth and taking the name of Bourdon/Burden, eventually obtaining land in Feddal, in Penhshire. The second son took the name of Lamb as being nearest his own of Lamont, The third son went to Paisley, in Ayrshire, where the abbot of Paisley gave him a small piece of land. The youngest son became the originator of the McToumors/ McTumers of Luss, a small glen on the west side of Loch Lomond, About two centuries later, families by the name of Lamb are found in the earliest records of the Parish of Kilmadock, some thirteen miles south-west ofFeddal. A Massacre Remembered During the Civil War in Scotland (1642-49), the Campbells harried the Lamonts, sacking and burning the home of the Lamont chief, Toward Castle, in early 1646. Later that year, the Campbells called the Lamonts to a peace talk at Dunoon. It was agreed that the negotiators on both sides would come unarmed. Two hundred Lamonts including thirty-six of the clanâs specia] gentlemen, those who were closely related to the chief, came without weapons of any kind. The Campbells arrived heavily armed and began slaughtering the Lamonts, ï¬rst by hanging the special gentlemen on a tree, then burying all two hundred of the Lamonts in a pit, some still alive. This dreadful massacre shook all of Scotland, Finally in 1661, the Marquis of Argyll, chief of the Campbell clan, was executed for his part in the Lamont massacre and other crimes. The lands in Cowal taken by the Campbells were returned to the Lamonts. By this time most of those of the Lamont clan who were left aï¬er the massacre, had scattered, many seeking safety in Ayrshire, To protect themselves from the vindictiveness of the Campbells, most adopted concealing or safe names, such as Black, Brown or White In 1906, the Clan Lamont Society of Scotland, erected a memorial at Dunoon commemorating the massacre of the Lamonts in 1646. Perhaps the publicity connected with this event reached Canada and brought back ancient memories to the Lambs at Lochaber Bay Back In The [Wists Of Time. Some three hundred years later and half a world away, this massacre was recalled by Lambs in Canada. It was a sunny Sunday aï¬ernoon in June 1935, when the Walter Lamb family of Ottawa were visiting their cousins, Dorothy Lamb and her nephews Percy and Jamie Campbell, who still lived on and worked the original Lamb farm on the Ottawa River at Lochaber Bay, Quebec. The farmhouse sat on a ridge about ï¬ï¬y feet above the river A glassed-in porch on the front of the house gave a panoramic View of the river and the rolling farmland on the Ontario shore Here in the porch Dorothy Lamb was relating stories of the early days on the farm to the visitors. Suddenly her eyes took on a far away look and she said, "Way back in the mists of time in Scotland, the Campbells massacred the Lambs. Since that time the Lambs had no dealings with the Campbells. But,â she continued, âivhen the Lambs came to Canada, there were Campbells on the next farm.â âThen a Lamb man-led a Campbell,â referring to her older sister, Margaret, who had married Percy and Jamie's father, Hugh Campbell. âAnd someday a Campbell will 7 -------------- --------------- he ngâs Park me Royz! . The ngs Know? x Huldï¬llul " The Town of Stirling in 1700, -------------- --------------- inherit the Lamb property. " One of the children present never forgot this story. The Lambs massacred! How could that be? Fifty years later in 1985, the documented account of the 1646 massacre of the Lamonts, of which the Lambs are a sept, was found in Scotland in the Inventoiy of Lamont Papers, 1231-1897. The massacre described by Dorothy Lamb did occur âback in the mists of time in Scotland.â Stirling: the Key to the Kingdom The narrowest part of Scotland, sometimes called its waist, lies between the Firth of Clyde on the west and the Firth of Forth on the east. As the estuary of the Firth of Forth narrows, the River Forth meanders across the wide tidal ï¬ats in great loops, From a distance the low hills on both shores seem to join together against the hazy blue backdrop of the Highland mountains Nearer to the hills, the great fortress-crowned rock of Stirling rises out of the river's levels. During the Middle Ages, Stirling was the Key to the Kingdom, for whoever held Stirling, controlled all of Scotland. A great loop of the Forth, which separated the Highlands from the Lowlands, surrounded Stirling on three sides forming a natural moat. Only an easily defended, narrow, mile-long causeway joined Stirling to the north shore and the Highlands, making Stirling an impregnable fortress. Westwards, beyond Stirling, for some twenty-five miles, stretched another natural defence: an impassable ï¬ve-mile wide bog or moss along the River Forth, from Stirling to the foothills of Ben Lomond. In the 15th and 16th centuries, the palace within Stirling Castle was the favoured residence of the Stewart kings and, for a time, of Mary, Queen of Scots (1542-1567), A magniï¬cent Great Hall was added to the palace by James IV (1488-1513). In 1501, he also built and endowed 3 Chapel Royal, where Mary, Queen of Scots was baptized and crowned in 1543. Both Mary, and later James V], spent many of their childhood years within the secure walls of the castle. The Stewart kings were patrons of the arts and invited musicians, writers and poets to attend court at Stirling. They also staged jousts and toumaments in the castle grounds, inviting competitors from Denmark, England and France, The castle architecture and the poetic output of the time, comprise some of Scotland's ï¬nest cultural heritage, During these years the Scottish Parliament also met within the walls of the castle The representatives gathered in the large hall, one hundred and twenty feet in length and loï¬y in height, richly decorated, in Parliament House. For a time Stirling was the capital of Scotland. Outside the castle walls, a town developed on a short, steep slope on the south side of the rock. Alter the Union of Crowns in 1603 when James VI of Scotland became James I of the United Kingdom, royal visits to Stirling were rare. Stirling again became just a stategic link between the Highlands and Lowlands of Scotland. The Varied Realms of F air Menteith West of Stirling lay the Vale ofMenteith, more poetically called âthe varied realms of fair Menteith.â To some, the view resembles a giant bowl tipping southwards where a 9 -------------- --------------- . {23 56.52% 3.3 2: Ba 3300 @565 23.96.22? an: a a u 5 Ii Seamus MEmekgx 35:6 INCHE§WOE<W\\ Irl. \ .55â :25: 1 .2: .25 5m .1253 EA 53 mm: 52.5.5; 10 -------------- --------------- low chain of hills form the southern edge, 0n the west and north, part of the Highlands rim the wide valley, among them the peaks of Ben Lomond (3129 feet), Ben Ledi (2875 feet) and Ben Vorlich (3224 feet) can be seen, The hills, rocky on the heights, were covered with grassland and heather, and at lower levels along the rivers, fertile carseland. Across the ï¬oor of the valley stretched the thirty mile long moss covering an ancient arm of the North Sea, through which meandered the River Forth ï¬owing from its source on the east side of Ben Lomond. The Forth has three main tributaries About a mile upstream from Stirling, a modest river, Allan Water, ï¬ows southwest from the Ochil Hills through Strathallan to join the Forth. In the Highlands to the north, the largest and longest tributary, the River Teith, has two sources, Loch Voil and Loch Katrine, whose outlet streams meet above the town of Callander. Rushing past the town of Donne, the Teith parallels the Forth for several miles before emptying into it. The land north of the Forth is well watered with many springs and lochs, large and small. The largest is the Lake of Menteith, a loch of ancient fame, Water from the Lake of Menteith ï¬ows southeasterly through Goodie Water and into the Forth about six miles west of the Teith. The Lands of Menteith The feudal system was introduced into Scotland in the twelï¬h century, in which all the land was held in the name of the King and expressed as being held "of the Crown." The King could lease or feu large tracts of his Kingdom to various relatives, court favourites who were oï¬en titled lairds or clan chiefs, and to the Roman Catholic church and various church orders, They in turn divided the land into smaller parcels which they leased to their kith and kin, who divided the land again and leased it to others, who repeated the process. These layers of ownership of leased land can be shown as a triangle in which the many at the bottom supported the few at the top by the payment of the feu or rent. At ï¬rst the feu was made in kind, such as a given quantity of oats or barley, cattle or sheep, payable at a stated time of year. This was usually at Martinmas in November, when the crops were in and the cattle were sold. In later times, payment was made in silver coin, the parcels of land oï¬en being described by the annual feu, as the nine-merk land of Boquhapple. Payment was also made in service. It might be providing work at certain times of year, such as harvest time, or answering the call to arms. All men were required to arm themselves and respond when summoned by the laird. This system led to a strong sense of obligation to those in power at the top and provided a sense of security to those without power at the bottom. About this same time, the land outside the towns such as Edinburgh, Perth and Stirling, was divided into earldoms. The vale of Menteith was the major part of the Earldom of Menteith. A Stewart or someone married to a Stewart carried the title of Earl of Menteith. A large part of the land in Menteith was held by the Roman Catholic church, who leased their church lands or kirklands for farming. The Drummonds, related to the Stewarts through marriage, were the Earls of Perth. They also held land in Menteith, ll -------------- --------------- 55m hoax 553° u 233:3 E 5.252% «Em and 05â58qu xuovaEECO 3.2.8; 2: quEE so 03 Emï¬mmm \ l \ \ Ibmâhzmu). m0 .SâCm mm... m0 Impâ<1 12 -------------- --------------- The Changing Church By the 6th century, Celtic missionaries from the Christian church on Iona, an island off the west coast of Scotland, had reached the varied realms of fair Menteith, then part of the Pictish Kingdom of Fortriu, These missionaries included Hug, Docus and Lolan who with their followers built small churches, called cills or kils, of turf and local stone. The Celts much preferred outdoor worship on a hillside, under a tree or by a burn. Bible stories and prayers were recited and retold orally and passed from person to person and generation to generation in Gaelic. These missionaries left a heritage of the Christian faith and placenames such as Kilmahug, Kilmadock and Boquhapple, to remind succeeding generations of the chapels they built and the places they lived, In 1058, Malcolm Canmore came to the throne of Scotland as Malcolm III. Eleven years later he married Margaret Atheling of the royal family of Hungary who was a devout Roman Catholic. The Celtic Church was not to her liking. Queen Margaret abhorred worship in the outdoors and disliked the way in which the sacrament of holy communion was dispensed. When Queen Margaret could not reform the Celtic Church, she built a great stone church, Dunfermline Abbey, next to the royal palace, There she installed Roman Catholic priests from England and altered large grants of land to Roman Catholic orders to come to Scotland. The Celtic Church, a church of the people, could not compete with such royal power and the royal treasury. The church in Scotland became Roman Catholic In the 16th and 17th centuries, following the Protestant Reformation, The Church of Scotland, which was Presbyterian, divided the country into presbyteries These were subâdivided into local parishes, centered around the parish church On the north side of the Forth, the southern boundary of Perthshire, there are three Church of Scotland parishes, Kilmadock, Kincardine, and Port of Menteith. Together, these parishes form a large triangle, Kilmadock on the north, Kincardine on the south, and Port of Menteith on the west, meeting near the Village of Thomhill. 7712 Parish of Kilmadock The parish takes its name from Docus, one of the early Celtic Christian missionaries, who settled, at least for a time, on the shore of the River Teith where it is joined by Annat Bum. With the term of endearment, ma. preï¬xed to his name, the church he founded here was known as Cill ma Docus, or in later years Kilmadock. St. Docus probably died about 570 AD, In the 13th century, a Roman Catholic monastery was built on this site and likely came under the jurisdiction or the Prior of Inchmahome. Aï¬er the Reformation, this became the parish church and burial ground of the Church of Scotland. In 1756 a new parish church was built several miles downstream in the town of Doune. Doune, centered on an old market cross, was for many years famous for the manufacture of pistols, introduced in 1645 by Robert Caddell, In the 18th century, six annual fairs or markets were held at Doune on the term days of Martinmas, Yoole, Candlemas, Whitsunday, Lammas and Michaelmas. The largest markets were at Michaelmas (September 29th) and Martinmas (November 11th) when cattle from miles around were bought and sold. The parish itself is roughly triangular in shape, the base on the south bordering the 13 -------------- --------------- parishes of Kincardine and Port of Menteith for about 8 miles at a height of some 50 feet above sea level. The sides, each 9 miles long, rise gradually to the height of land on Uam Var, at 2181 feet. In spite of its upward slope, almost all the land was good for farming or grazing cattle and easily accessible. The Parish ofKr'ncardine Oï¬en referred to as Kincardineâby-Doune or Kincardine»in-Menteith to distinguish it from other Kincardines in Scotland, this parish lies between the southern border of Kilmadock and the River Forth, and extends for about ten miles ï¬om the Teith to the eastern border of the Parish of the Port of Menteith, Here, St. Lolan, another Celtic missionary, built a chapel in the 6th or 7th century. Lolan's bell, a relic of the Celtic church was known to exist as late as 1935. A new parish church was built about 1716 by the Drummonds of the Blair-Drummond Estate. Half the land in the parish was good farmland or carseland. The other half lay under the moss or marsh covering the land on either side of the F orth, The mosses had varying depths; two to three feet near the edges and as much as ï¬ï¬een feet near the center, It also had different names depending on the estate of which it was a part. The moss nearest to Stirling was called Drip Moss, and to its west, Blair»Drummond Moss. During the reign of the Stewart kings in the 16th century, at least two estates were raised into baronies. The Barony of Drummond, later the Blair-Drummond Estate, was held by the Earl ofPerth, The Barony of Boquhapple, on the westem border of the parish, was granted to the Earl of Menteith. Both these baronies were forfeited after the Jacobite Rebellion of 1745. The Parish of the Part 0fMenteith The heart of the ancient Earldom of Menteith was the Parish of the Port of Menteith which lies to the west of the Parishes of Kilmadock and Kincardine, The Lake of Menteith, almost in the center of the parish, is like a shallow saucer set among gentle hills, unlike most lochs in Scotland which have rocky shores. This may have been the reason the Loch of Inchmahome became the Lake of Menteith in Victorian times. The lake, almost oval in shape, contained several islands; the largest being the Island of Inchmahome. This was the early site of a Celtic chapel and, in the 12th century, a Roman Catholic monastery, famed in the 16th century as a safe haven for Mary, Queen of Scots. On the north-eastem shore of the lake was a small group of cottages and a pier where boats were kept to reach the islands, called the Port of Menteith. This became the site of a new church and manse of the Church of Scotland aï¬er the Reformation. The surrounding hills are a mixture of fertile farmland and swampy places. Much of the parish is covered by Flanders Moss, a vast area of some twenty square miles. The land on the eastern border of the parish was once the Barony of Ruskie, held by the Earl of Menteith, Although the Barony was abolished aï¬er the Jacobite Rebellion of 1745, the area still carries the name of Ruskie. Life in The Vale ofMenter'th The writers of The Statistical Account of Scotland in the various parishes of the Vale of Menteith provide an account of everyday life around the end of the 18th century. 14 -------------- --------------- The writer for the Parish of Kilmadock says it in these words. While the Grampion mountains protect it (the vale) from the nipping frosts of the north, it is ï¬nely exposed to the Atlantic breeze and the heat of the sun Being situated in the centre of the kingdom, the climate is mild and free of those rains that drench the western coast, and the piercing winds that blow incessantly on the inhabitants of the eastern borders Hence, in this parish, there are few diseases, The inhabitants enjoy a clear healthful atmosphere, and live to a good old agew. the only fatal diseases are, the small-pox among the children, and fevers and consumptions among the middle aged,â In this district a simplicity of manners, peculiar to rural felicity, has for a long time, prevailed . .4 Most of the people spoke a mixture of English and Scotch, sometimes called Broad Scotch. A dialect of northem English, Broad Scotch was used by Robert Burns and Sir Walter Scott in their stories, poems and songs. One of Burnâs most familiar songs still sung today is Auld Lang Syne, The people living in the northern area generally spoke Gaelic, The Statistical Account of Scotland continues, The houses are much improved of late. The tenants now begin to perceive the advantage of good houses and of living separate from their cattle. Owing to the want of enclosures yences) the black cattle make but a poor ï¬gure at the Donne markets The whole cattle, young and old, kept on the parish are about 2243 If we reckon the inhabitants to be near 2800, and the horses, 570, there is about one horse for every fifth soul, which is a serious concern to the nation The produce, like the soil, is various, viz. wheat, rye, oats, barley, beans, peas,, clover, ryeâgrass, and ï¬are The soil is also friendly to all kinds of roots, particularly the potato and turnip, which grow in great abundance and perfection. John Ramsay (1736-1814) of Ochtertyre, an estate in Kincardine Parish, adjacent to Blair Drummond Moss, was an 18th century diarist. He wrote that on the farms in the vale of Menteith, âwhere the chief dependence was upon com (oats, barley and wheat), each tenant had commonly a ploughgate.â A ploughgate was about forty Scots acres equal to ï¬ï¬y Imperial or English acres Ramsay goes on to describe the life of the tenant farmers living near his estate. The Lambs and McFarlanes were among these. In this corner, and in most of the carses, the tenantsâ houses were mostly built with foil or divot (sods), which in a few years had the appearance of a wall of clay, Yet, when properly thatched, they were warmer and freer from damp than what was built of stone and clay, 15 -------------- --------------- Within my own remembrance the farmhouses of the Muir were all built with fail, the last of them being pulled down only a few years ago. The chief objection to this mode of building was its uncovering so much ground It accorded, however, with the inclination our tenants showed to save upon every article. The same simplicity and parsimony appeared in other things, stable-doors being made of wattles (wooden stakes interlaced with twigs and branches), and there were seldom any locks upon the barn doors, The most rigid economy appeared in the dress and domestic expenses of tenants The clothes of the family, and even of the servants, male and female, were for the most part spun and dyed at home; and thus, though hardly anything was made for sale, the wifeâs thrift in a numerous household turned to excellent account, as it saved her husband from going to market for a variety of necessaries. In the last age, the mast substantial farmers seldom had anything better than a coat of grey or black kelt (woolen homespun cloth), spun by their wives, Twice or thrice in a lifetime, perhaps, they had occasion to buy a greatcoat of English cloth (waterproof cloth), as what was homespun would not keep out rain. Harn (coarse homespun) shirts were commonly worn, though upon holidays the country beaus appeared with linen necks and sleeves. Among no set of people was female vanity ever conï¬ned within narrower limits; even marriage apparel being mostly manufactured in the family, and their ordi- nary wear being only a few degrees coarser and plainer. The gowns of women, old and young, were made by country tailors, who never thought of changing or inflammg the fashions. In point of equipage they were equally primitive, few of the topping tenants having either boots or saddles fifty years ago. It was the custom for them and their wives to ride upon sods, over which, on occasions of ceremony, a plaid or bit of carpet was spread. And now of the food of our tenants, which they ate in a truly primitive manner, at the same table with their servants. Oatmeal-pottage (thick soup) was once esteemed a luxury among that set of people, bearmeal being generally used Pease or bear (barley) bread was a capital article with them, wheat-loaves being now more common in farmersâ houses. than oat-cakes were formerly In times of scarcity recourse was had to inferior kinds, which are now happily forgotten - viz, grey meal â ie., a species compounded of oatmeal and mill-dust; others made use of egger meal, consisting of equal portions of oat, pease, and bear meal, The latter took its rise from the beggars (weeds) mixing different kinds in the same bag. T 0 some palates it is said not to have been unpleasant. In every family water-kail (hail broth) was a standing dish, being made without flesh (meat), of greens and grolls - i,e., oats stripped of the husks in the mill. Without it they did not think they could dine to purpose. If tradition may be believed the country people of old ate very little animal food, except perhaps a few old ewes that would not sell, and were likely to 16 -------------- --------------- die through the winter.... But for the last sixty years almost every tenant in tolerable circumstances killed either one or two. When there was no ï¬esh, kitchen (other food) of one kind or other was given after the [rail - that is, either butter, cheese, eggs, herrings, and sometimes raw onions, which were annually imported from F landers. To supper they had sowens, or ï¬ummery (thickened cereal), a Cheap and healthy dish. In summer their drink consisted of whey or butter-milk, and in spring a little milk. But hardly any ale was brewed, except an extraordinary occasions. Indeed, the chief beverage of our country people has always been the pure element (water). Upon the whole, it may safely be aï¬irmed that there hardly ever was a set of people who lived more poorly and penuriously, yet they were in general well pleased with their lot, Whatever might be their grievances, the meanness of their food and raiment seldom gave them a momentâs disquietude. In a farm kitchen of this period most of the dishes were of wood, possibly some of pewter, a few of earthenware. One or two knives were used for cutting meat for the entire household. Forks were scarce. Food was generally eaten with the ï¬ngers. Horn spoons, called cutties, moulded from melted cattle horn, were used for such foods as pottage, water-kail and sowen. John Ramsay of Ochtertyre continues with his observations of his neighbourâs system of ï¬nances. Such were the labourers of the ground, and such their situation in former times, so far as we can collect from the conversation of the aged They appear to have been warmly devoted to the persons of their masters, and entirely subservient to them in everything where their own purse was not aï¬ected, Though by no means deï¬cient in industry which would make a speedy return, they laid their account that any extraordinary exertion or outlay on their part would, in the long-run, redound as much to their masterâs proï¬t as their own, and they had no mind to work for him. They therefore had a system of their own, founded on long experience, and suited to small capitals and tacks (assets i.e. cattle and land leases) for nineteen years, From this they were unwilling to deviate, unless for some self-evident advantage: and with all its defects, it is not easy to ï¬gure one by which the same quantity of grain could be raised for the same money. Their aversion to enterprise and innovation was fortiï¬ed by a principle which pervaded every part of their conduct - viz., the desire of saving and hoarding. Indeed, no set of men ever followed more invariably old Cato's rule, of being "vendaces non emaces" [sellers not buyers]. It is astonishing what sums of money the tenants of the last age had out at interest with the gentlemen of the country, They and the burghers were of old the moneyed men, who supplied the demands of the nobility and gentry that were engaged in any expensive pursuit. l7 -------------- --------------- The Farmtoun of Thomhill In his book, A History of The Scottish People, [530-1830, T, C. Smout writes that during this period, eight out of every ten Scots lived on the land and were dependent on their farm's productivity for their livelihood. Farms varied in shape and size fomiing a crazy-quilt pattern across the countryside. Usually two to four related families worked a farm together as joint tenants with various arrangements for performing the necessary tasks. Here, tradition was the rule. Farms were not fenced Roads were merely centuries-old tracks wandering across the land avoiding swampy places and thickets of gorse and broom. Consequently there were few villages. Where land was arable a few farm houses clustered together could become known as a farmtoun This seems to be the origin of Thomhill, a cluster of houses on the eastern edge of the Barony of Boquhapple held by the Stewarts of Menteith and the western border of lands held by Robert Norie, Thomhill is the place our Lamb families in Canada called home, even though in Scotland they lived on farms a mile or two east, west or south of Thomhill. The conï¬guration of the Church of Scotland parishes in the area of Thomhill places the Lambs in the three parishes of Kilmadock, Kincardine and Port of Menteith, yet all within a short distance of Thomhill. Parish Records in the 17th Century The Old Parochial Registers (OPRs) of the Church of Scotland are the records of baptisms and marriages performed in the local parish, These registers were kept by the minister or the session clerk, the latter oï¬en the local school teacher. The OPRs that have survived the centuries are now in the Scottish Record Ofï¬ce in Edinburgh. They are available on microï¬lm in Canada. The earliest records are found in the Parish of Kilmadock beginning in 1623; in the Parish of Kincardine in 1691; and in the Parish of the Port of Menteith in 1697. The amount of information in each entry varies. In the baptismal records of the early 17th century only the names of the father and child were given. Later the name of the mother and sometimes the place of residence and the names of witnesses, were included, making it easier to connect families. Marriages oï¬en took place in late December alter the harvest was over but not registered until January of the following year. If the bride and groom lived in different parishes, the marriage was usually registered in both parishes at different times providing two dates, a week, a month, or even a year apart. These early records were handwritten; the writing difï¬cult to read today. Some pages or parts of pages are missing. It was not compulsory to register vital statistics in Scotland until 1855 and in times of stress or war many entries were never made. Spelling has changed over time. In the 17th century, Lamb was spelled as Lambe and John as Johne. Both Janet and Margaret had many variations in spelling. Place names, too, changed. At different times McOrriston was spelled, McOrristoune and Mackaurostoune. In spite of these difï¬culties, it is significant that there were Lamb families living near Thomhill as early as 1623. In that year on the thirteenth day of December, the marriage of Finlay Lamb and Marion Chalmer was registered in the Parish of Kilmadock Their son, Finlay, was baptized in 1630 and their daughter, Margat or Margrat, in 1633 In 1648, 18 -------------- --------------- Margrat, age ï¬fteen, married John Belch, At ï¬rst glance there seems little connection between the entries in the 17th century, but from a generational point of View of twenty or thirty years, there is a John Lamb, indicated by numbers in squared brackets, living in the Parish of Kilmadock. Aï¬er 1679 the name William occurs regularly through the 18th and into the 19th century. Johne [1]l Lambe, probany born before 1623, appears in the parish records in the 1640s as the father of four children, The youngest, John [2], married Margaret Douglasse, possibly as early as 1670. By tradition their ï¬rst son would have been named John [3] for his paternal grandfather, John [1], John [2] Lambe and Margaret Douglasse also had sons named William [1], baptized in 1679, and Alexander, baptized in 1684. The names John and William keep recurring in each generation through the centuries. Parish Records in the 18th Century. This century was a time of stress and distress in Scotland. The Jacobite Rebellion of 1715 brought disruption to those living in the vale of Menteith, both the Jacobite and English armies travelling by foot across the countryside. The last battle was fought on November 13, 1715 on Sheriff Muir, about eight miles east of Thomhill, Although the battles were farther away during the Jacobite Rebellion of 1745, the Jacobite army moved south mostly through Stirling Later, both armies marched northward before the ï¬nal massacre at Culloden in 1746. The alter-math of the rebellion brought drastic new laws to all of Scotland, These disruptions alone cannot account for the fact that there are no records of any Lamb children baptized in the Parish of Kilmadock between 1735 and 1772 One sentence in the account of the Parish of Kilmadock in the New Statistical Account of Scotland published in 1844 may explain the absence of any records. Without giving a date, it states that in the past, one volume of the parish registers was bumed in a ï¬re in the local schoolhouse In this century there are two Lamb family groups; one living at McOrriston, the other, ï¬rst at Bridge End of Goodie, both in the Parish of Kilmadock, and later at Borland in Ruskie, in the Parish of Port of Menteith. All these farm estates are within a two mile radius of Thornhill. Lamb: of McOrriston, Parish of Kilmadock, 1693-1786. Obviously, there are gaps in the records of baptisms and marriages among these Lamb families. Most often there is a record of marriage but no record of baptism of the bride or groom. In some records the name of the witness adds a clue to family connections. The words, probably, and possibly, have been used to suggest names where records are lacking. The one common thread is that all these Lambs lived at McOrriston and were most certainly related. McOrriston was a farm estate about a mile south-east of Thomhill. In 1693, John [3] Lamb and his wife, Janet Paton, lived at McOrriston, when the baptism of four of their â Numbers in square brackets refer to similar numbers in relevant charts, eg, Johne [1] refers to Johne [l] Lambe, in Chart #1, Lambs of McOrriston, Kilmadock Parish. p, 20. 19 -------------- --------------- Chart #1 â Lambs of Mc0rristan, Kilmadack Parish 1 Johne [l] Lambe b: Abt. 1620 . +Unknnwn ...... ,. 2 JonetLambe b: 1642 . 2 Robert Lambe b: 1645 . 2 Helen Lambs b: 1647 . 2 Johne[2]Lambe b: 1650 +Margaret Douglasse m: Abt. 1670 3 Johne [3] Lamb b: Abt. 1670 +Janet Paton . 4 John [4] Lamb bâ Abt, 1691 . +Agnes Christie b: 1696 m: 1722 5 Elizabeth Lamb +JamesMa1jorybanks b: 1728 m: 1757 ......... .. 6 James Marjorybanks b: 1760 5 James Lamb b: 1726 +Mary Douny b: 1726 m: 1751 6 John [5] Lamb +Mary McAnhur m: 1773 , 7 John [6] Lamb b: 1774 . 7 James Lamb b: 1776 . .......... .. 7 MaryLamb b: 1779 6 James Lamb +Mary Symers m: 1780 . 7 AnnLamb b: 1781 7 Mary Lamb b: 1782 7 Mary Lamb b: 1784 . 7 Isobell Lamb b: 1786 4 James Lamb b: Abt. 1692 +Ann/AnnaDuncan m: 1714 4 David Lamb b; 1693 4 Elezebeth Lamb b: 1695 4 MaryLamb b: 1703 . .. 4 Cristian Lamb b: 1706 ,1 3 William[1]Lamb b: 1679 +Unknown 4 William [2] Lamb" b: Abt. 1700 +Ann/Anna Lockhan b: 1705 m: Abt. 1725 . 3 Alexander Lamb b: 1684 * For descendants of William [2] Lamb, see Chart #2, p, 22 20 -------------- --------------- children, were recorded, David, in 1693, Elezebeth in 1695, Mary in 1703 and Cristian in 1706, James Paton, of Ballinton, a farm just south of McOrriston, was a witness at some of the baptisms and was probably the father of Janet. There are no other records of these children, The marriage of James Lamb and Ann/Anna Duncan was recorded in 1714, Possibly James was an older son of John3 Lamb and Janet Paton, named for his matemal grandfather, James Paton, following the traditional naming pattern. There are no known children. Another older son of John [3] Lamb and Janet Paton, likely was named John [4] for his patemal grandfather, John [2] Lambe. John [4] Lamb married Agnes Christie in 1722 and lived at McOrriston. A son, James was born to John [4] Lamb and Agnes Christie and baptized in 1726. He married Mary Douny in 1751. James Lamb and Mary Douny appear to have had at least two sons, John [5] and James. John [5] Lamb married Mary McArthur in 1773. They had three children, John [6] baptized in 1774; James in 1776 and Mary in 1779. James Lamb married Mary Symers in 1780 Their four daughters were Ann baptized in 1781, Mary in 1782, Mary in 1784 and Isobel] in 1786. These families at McOrriston disappear from the records of the Parish of Kilmadock after 1786, Lambs Living at Bridge End of Goodie, Parish of Kilmadock, c. 1 735. No early maps of the area around Thornhill identify a place called Bridge End of Goodie. However, the Bridge of Goodie, which probably replaced an ancient ford, crossed Goodie Water a short distance south of McOrriston. As there were no roads through this area in the early 18th century other than bare tracks, a farm at either end of the bridge was likely called Bridge End of Goodie William [2] Lamb bom about 1700, probably was the son of William [1] Lamb, hp. 1679, Records show that William [2] Lamb and his wife, Ann/Anna Lockhart, the daughter of Thomas Lockhart and Mam'on Kirkwood, had a son, Thomas, baptized in 1835, Probably Janet Lamb, who married George McQueen in 1760 and John Lamb, who married Helen Burn in 1772, also belonged to this family. Lambs afBorIand in Mskie, Parish of The Part anenteith, c. 1 760â1840. Borland, a farm on the large estate of Ruskie, was a little more than a mile west of Thomhill. It is here that George McQueen and his wife, Janet Lamb, lived after their marriage in 1760 and where their six children were born; John baptized in 1761, William in 1764, Elizabeth in 1766, Christian in 1770, Mary in 1772 and Peter in 1774. In 1768, Thomas Lamb, son of William Lamb and Ann Lockhart, married Mary Marjorybanks, of Boquhapple, in the Parish of Kincardine. They also lived at Borland where their six children born, Mary baptized in 1768, William in 1770, James in 1771, Ann in 1773, Catharine in 1774, and John2 in 1776 who married Jean MCGibbon in 1808 2 See Letters from Scotland, p. 23, Z] -------------- --------------- Chart #2 - Lambs 0f Bridge End of Goodie and Barland in Ruskie. 1 William [2] Lamb b: Abt, 1700 in Bridge End of Goodie, Kilmadock Parish : +Ann/Anna Lockhan b: 1705 m: Abt. 1725 2 Janet Lamb b; Abt. 1730 . +George McQueen b: in Borland in Ruskie, Port of Mentieth Parish m: 1760 . 3 John McQueen b: 1761 . 3 William McQueen b: 1764 . 3 Elizabeth McQueen b: 1766 . 3 Christian McQueen b: 1770 . 3 Mary McQueen b: 1772 . 3 Peter McQueen b: 1774 2 Thomas Lamb b: 1735 +Mary Marjorybanks b: 1734 m. 1768 3 MaryLamb b; 1768 3 William Lamb b: 1770 . 3 James Lamb b: 1771 3 AnnLamb b: 1773 3 Catharine Lamb b: 1774 3 John Lambâ b: 1776 +Jean McGibbonâ b: 1785 m: 1808 2 John Lamb b: Abt. 1740 1111 .: +Helen Burn m: 1772 3 Agnes Lamb b: 1772 3 William [3] Lamb b: 1774 +Catharine Drummond m: 1797 . 4 John Lamb" b: 1799 ,. Hanet McQueen m: 1824 V 4 James Lamb b: 1801 , 4 William Lamb b: 1804 . 4 Thomas Lamb b: 1806 r 4 Robert Lamb b: 1808 V 4 JanetLamb b, 1810 3 Elizabeth Lamb b: 1776 +Robe11 Hall b: 1776 m: 1798 . 4 George Hall b: 1800 . 4 Helen Hall b: 1802 , 4 JohnHall b: 1304 . 4 Jennet Hall b: 1806 . 3 James LambM b: 1778 in Ruskie, Parish of Port of Menteith ....................... ., +Elizabeth McFarlane b: 1773 in Parish of Kjlmadock m: 1809 * For references to John Lamb (1). 1776), Jean McGibbon) and John Lamb (b: 1799) see "Leiters from Scotland" opposite. " For descendants of James Lamb (b. 1778) see Chart #3, p 117 22 -------------- --------------- John Lamb married Helen Bum in 1772, Their four children were born at Borland in Ruskie. A daughter, Agnes, was baptized in 1772. There are no other records of Agnes. William Lamb, baptized in 1774, married Catharine Drummond. of the Parish of Kincardine, in 1797. They farmed at Borland in Ruskie. Their seven children were Elizabeth, baptized in 1798; John, in 1799', James, in 1801; William, in 1804; Thomas, in 1806; Robert, in 1808; and Janet in 1810. Elizabeth, baptized in 1776, married Robert Hall in 1798. They continued to live at Borland in Ruskie, Their children were George, baptized in 1800; Helen, in 1802; John, in 1804; and Jennet, in 1806. James Lamb (1778-1855) married Elizabeth McFarlane (1783-1853) of Mid Frew in 1809.3 Letters from Scotland. Three letters written to Lambs in Canada in later times and still in existence, mention family relationships and friends back home in Scotland, The earliest letter was written by D. Ferguson, West Wood Lane, on Blair Drummond Moss dated March 28, 1832 and sent to John Lamb (1809-1895) at Hawkesbury Mills, Upper Canada Ferguson wrote, "I saw your cousin John Lamb. This appears to refer to John Lamb, bp, 1799, a son of William Lamb and Catharine Drummond. A later sentence read, "The Drummonds has their respects to you and would put you in mind that your time is out in coming to see us." After sending his familyâs "best respects to your father and mother. " He closed with the words, "Yours affectionately, D, Ferguson." The second letter to John Lamb at Hawkesbury Mills, Upper Canada, was written March 25, 1841 by Alexander Marshall, minister of the Congregational Church in Stirling. His news is mostly of the Congregational Church, its members and friends. Towards the end he writes, "You will have heard of the death of Daniel Ferguson, your old neighbour at the Latchet.â The latchet is a term referring to a loop, an apt description for a loop on the Forth, close to West Wood Lane. The third letter was addressed to James Lamb (1778-1855) at Lochaber Bay, Canada East. The writer, John V.E. Johnstone, was a contemporary of James Lamb, if not a relation. There is no date but a partial postmark reads, aber, 184... , C.E., indicating it was received at the Lochaber Post Oï¬ce, Canada East, in the 1840s. John Johnstone refers to previous correspondence and sending newspapers from Scotland. Although parts of the letter are missing along its original folds, it mentions Jean (McGibbon) and her husband (John Lamb, hp, 1776) and Mary, probably their daughter, and her husband, intending to visit Uncle John in America. Jean's brother, John McGibbon, emigrated to Canada in 1817 and settled on the Island of Montreal. Another sentence reï¬ects the changing times, âArch. McFarlane left the Frew last Martinmass and is now at Newhouse near Hutchinsons. He kept his farm as long as he could, but the rents in the Frew are not what they were once, and if the price of grain continues at the present rate, I fear there will be many more changes in this country." Arch. McFarlane was probably a cousin of Elizabeth McFarlane. 3 SeeA New Beginning, p, 30 and Chart #3, p 117 23 -------------- --------------- The McFarlanes. Another family living in the Parish of Kilmadock close to the Bridge of Goodie were the McFarlanes of Mid F rew, The history of the Clan McFarlane goes back to the 13th century when Gilchrist, a son of the Earl of Lennox, obtained a charter to the lands of Arrochar, which lie to the west of Loch Lomond. From Gilchrist's grandson, Parlan or Farlan, the clan took its name, McFarlane, The lands of Arrochar included Loch Sloy/Sloidh, a small loch between Loch Lomond and Loch Long. The name Loch Sloy became the clan's battle cry. Involved in many clan wars during the 16th and 17th centuries, the McFarlanes were proscribed, being deprived of both their land and the use of their clan name. The prescription was ï¬tted in the 18th century and many resumed the name McFarlane. Others kept the surnames they had adopted during the years of proscription. This accounts for the many septs of the McFarlane Clan. During these troublous times, some McFarlanes moved to Perthshire where their descendants are found in the parishes of fair Menteith. The earliest records of McFarlanes are in the Parish of Kilmadock when Archibald, son of Walter Farlan, was baptized in 1623. A second son, Dugall, was baptized in 1627. In the early 17th century, the spelling Farlan was used. Later, Farlan became McFarlan; then McFarlane by the 18th century, Lamb - McFarlane Marriages, 1686â1800. In the late 17th century, Walter McFarlane, of Kilmadock Parish, married Jonet/Janet Lamb. The baptism of three of their children are recorded: Helen baptized in 1686, Walter in 1689 and a second son, Walter in 1694. About sixty years later, William McFarlane, of the Parish of the Port of Menteith, married another Janet Lamb, Two of their children were baptized: William in 1761 and an unnamed son in 1763. In 1791, Duncan McFarlane, of Kincardine Parish, married Ann Lamb, of the Port of Menteith Parish. Ann, baptized in 1773, was the daughter of Thomas Lamb and Mary Marjorybanks, of Borland in Ruskie, Duncan and Ann's ï¬ve children were: Ann baptized in 1792, Duncan in 1793, John in 1796, Janet in 1799 and Betty in 1800. The McFarlanes of Mid Frew. There were several farms along the narrow strip of land between Goodie Water and the edge of the moss covering the Forth, including Easter Frew, Mid Frew and Wester Frew. It was thought this area, called the Fords of Frew on an early map, was the site of several ancient fords before the moss covered them. Here the moss itself was not very deep, providing a sort of underwater causeway across to the south side. Even so, these crossings could only be used in late summer and fall when the water levels were at their lowest. Men and animals were roped together for safety. This risky crossing was favoured by the McGregor clan who knew the route and used it when taking their cattle to market. Mid Frew on the south side of the Bridge of Goodie was the home of John McFarlane and his wife, Elizabeth Stewart, who were married in 1781. No earlier records of their baptisms were found in the Parish of Kilmadock, Their six children, all born at Mid Frew, were baptized in the Parish of Kilmadock: John in 1782, Elizabeth in 1783, Agnes in 1786, Kathrirre in 1788, John in 1790 and Margaret in 1792. 24 -------------- --------------- Elizabeth grew up at Mid Frew and married James Lamb, of Falkirk, in 1809.â Troublaus Times. When war broke out between Britain and France in 1793, many Scottish lairds responded to the call of the government in London by offering to raise corps of fencibles to protect Scotland against a possible French invasion. At least two regiments were mustered at Stirling Castle in 1794. These regiments were to serve anywhere in Scotland and only to leave the country if there was an invasion in the southern part of the United Kingdom Some tenants deliberately reï¬ised to send their sons and openly criticized recruiting methods such as bribery. Many who protested were threatened with cancellation of their farm leases, For those who did enlist, all did not go well. Sent to such places as Aberdeen, Perth, Glasgow, Edinburgh and Fort George, they found that many of the oï¬icers spoke only English and many of the men spoke only Gaelic. There were misunderstandings about pay arrangements and what was expected of the men. This led to a growing contempt for the English oï¬icers. In July of 1794, riots broke out among the fencibles, After more such incidents and a long trial, one fencible was shot and six others were transported for life, some to the West Indies and some to Canada. The year 1797 began quietly enough, In July, a new Militia Act was proposed by the government in London, conscripting six thousand men between the ages of nineteen and twenty-three. The men were to be chosen by ballot from baptismal entries in the church records in every parish. The reaction to the news of the Militia Act was sudden and furious It began in the Lowlands where an English regiment was brought in to quell the rioters. Several were killed. Soon Highlanders, who were expected to accept conscription without protest, were in revolt too. A number of lairds were besieged in their own houses by the tenants of their estates. The riots spread through Perthshire from the east coast to the Highlands. A troop of Highland soldiers was brought in to ï¬nd the ringleaders of the riots, They searched the hills and found some who were tried and found guilty. It was a great blow to Scottish pride that other Scots would suppress their own people, but the military presence had its effect, The aim of the rioters was to burn the parish records from which a list of males baptized between 1774 and 1778 could be compiled. In this time period, two Lambs were baptized in the Parish of Kilmadock, John and James, sons of John Lamb and Mary McArthur, ochOrriston, and three Lambs in the Parish of the Port of Menteith, John, son of Thomas Lamb and Mary Marjorybanks, and William and James, sons of John Lamb and Helen Bum, all of Borland in Ruskie. It is not known if any of these young men were conscripted to serve as fencibles. Still the lairds did not seem to realize that clan society had gone forever and that underneath most of their tenants now held a hatred for compulsory military service and a deep resentment over increasing rents and taxes. These feelings simmered through most of the summer. When the Militia Act was again imposed, it met with little resistance. â SeeA New Beginning, p. 30 and Chart #3, p. 117 25 -------------- --------------- .23 £82 vacâEinn 55 we 32 xsimvâat £15.»: .EEE {21. <an V «Ellile 1 ï¬ __ t: M :2 l. is?â A: gupqlung 9.1-7 26 -------------- --------------- Religious Ferment In the Scottish church, too, there was upheaval. In the late 17905, small independent groups gathered which challenged the dominant state Church of Scotland. A strong religious revival developed largely associated with two brothers, Robert and James Haldane, Fellowship groups, calling themselves Congregationalists, oï¬en referred to as Independents, gathered and built chapels, then larger churches, Some made walking tours of the Highlands and Islands, bringing the Christian Gospel to all who would listen, in both Gaelic and English. Opposition from the lairds and the ofï¬cial Church of Scotland (Presbyterian) was strong. Some who supported the Congregational movement lost their leases; some who preached were imprisoned on false charges. In spite of opposition the movement grew. An Agricultural Revolution. Change came slowly to the self-sustaining agrarian society in Scotland. The traditional age-old ï¬eld system of farming in narrow, curved rigs prevailed, boundary stones separating one holding from another. The land remained undrained, unlimed and under productive. Aï¬er the Act of Union in 1707 uniting Scotland and England, Scottish parliamentary representatives had to spend time in London, attending to affairs of state. There they met English farmer politicians and learned of new trends in farming, practiced in England, Some of these Scottish politicians adopted these new trends on their own lands in Scotland. Basic to all these new ideas, called the Enclosure Movement, was a better method of land use by improving drainage, clearing stones and brush from the ï¬elds and fencing the open or common pasture land so that there could be a rotation of crops. These lairds oï¬âered longer leases to their tenants and assisted in building new fences, often of stones cleared from the ï¬elds, and new farm buildings. Prizes were offered for the best farm animals and farm produce. Sons of the most progressive farmers were sent to England to learn new methods of husbandry. From a self-sustaining farm system of agriculture, Scotland was slowly and gradually moving to a market economy where the farms would provide food for the new towns being built to house the workers of the industrial revolution. The lairds behind the agricultural revolution were called âthe Improvers.â An Improver at Blair Drummond One of these was Henry Home, Lord Kames, whose wife, Agatha Drummond had inherited the Blair Drummond Estate in 1766. Lord Kames, a judge of the Court of Session, was over seventy years of age, when he took up residence at Blair Drummond. A man of wide interests, Lord Kames had already given much time and attention to improving the Home Estates in Berwiekshire. He was also a writer on many subjects. His character and disposition is expressed in this inscription on an obelisk he erected on the Blair Drummond Estate, F or his neighbours as well as himself Was this obelisk erected by Hemy Home. Graft Benevolence on Self-Love, T he fruit Will be delicious. 27 -------------- --------------- Sketch of 1792 shows the sunkm road cut through the Blair Drummond Moss. The moss houses were formed by placing a roof of timber on the pea bog and digging out the mterior. As the moss dned out, it shrank forming strong walls. A Model of the Great Wheel at Torr, now in \he museum at Blair Drummond 28 -------------- --------------- Learning that some 1500 acres of the estate lay under the moss, he tumed his attention to ways of draining it. Workmen were employed to carry out various experiments, It was found that with a sufï¬cient stream of water, the moss could be cut into small pieces, washed away into the Forth and ï¬oated to the ocean, exposing the rich alluvial clay on the bottom, which would provide fertile farmland. A source of water was found at a corn mill at Torr which used water from the River Teith, Lord Karnes purchased the mill and diverted the water across the carseland through a channel to the moss, Then he advertised for tenants, offering them a lease of eight acres for thirty-eight years and supplies to build a house, There would be no rent for seven years if they would agree to remove the moss and clear the land. Local people looked askance at the proposal, However, Lord Kames found tenants in the Highland parishes to the north of the vale of Menteith, Within a year the ï¬rst crops had been produced. When Lord Kames died in 1783 at the age of 86, about twenty-nine tenants were living on four hundred acres of cleared mossland Lord Kames was succeeded by his son, George Home Drununond, who continued the project of clearing the moss. Some eleven hundred acres still lay under the deepest part of the moss. This would need a more powerï¬Jl way ofwashing the moss into the Forth The Great Wheel at Torr. A millwright and inventor, George Meikle, was commissioned to design and build a water wheel which would liï¬ six tons of water every minute, powered by the same water, Called the Great Wheel, it was made of wood, with the dimensions of 28 feet in diameter and 10 feet in width, Lined with eighty buckets attached around the whole inner circumference, it made about four revolutions a minute raising the water 17 feet above the surface of the stream that turned the wheel The water was discharged into a trough from which it ï¬owed, partly in pipes and partly through an open aqueduct 1754 yards in length, into reservoirs on the Moss, This meant that water was always available to wash the loosened moss into the Forth Beginning in 1787, the Great Wheel operated day and night, year round, until 1839, when it was no longer needed, a total of 52 years As each new area of the moss was opened, roads were cut through to give farmers access to their 10 acre lots The settlement on the Moss continued to grow The Census of 1811 reports a population of 886, made up of 186 families, living on fertile farmland which forty years earlier had been a desolate bog Over the years there were many visitors who came to see and study this remarkable invention, the Great Wheel at Torr An Improver at Falkirk. This community, six miles southeast of Stirling near the south shore of the Firth of Forth, grew around one of the forts along the Antonine Wall built during the Roman occupation of Scotland in the ï¬rst century In the sixth or seventh century it is believed Celtic missionaries built a small church near the fort. Over time and through translations of Latin, English and Gaelic records, the church became known as the Faw Kirk, hence Falkirk. In the 17th century, the land around Falkirk was part of the Barony of Callendar, held by the Earl of Callendar It was one of the forfeited estates following the Jacobite 29 -------------- --------------- Rebellion of 1745, In 1780, another Improver, William Forbes, purchased the estate, An enthusiast of the Enclosure Movement, Forbes began to transform the Callendar Estate into model farm and woodlot acreages, renting the land to tenant farmers who would follow the new methods of fanning. The land was to be limed for two years, then planted to grass for pasture. Land overrun by heath and broom was to be ploughed ï¬ve times, before sown with grass, Within twenty years, the countryside underwent a transformation Everywhere there were straightened rigs, fences, hedgerows and drainage ditches, replacing the open fields that for a thousand years had been the accepted face of farming, Pasture land was now drained, limed and fertilized. New breeds of cattle and sheep were introduced. Crop rotation was also followed. The standard rotation in the Falkirk area in 1800 consisted of "in general six parts: First the ground is fallowed; secondly it is sown with wheat; thirdly with beans and pease; fourtth with barley; ï¬ï¬hly it produces a crop of grass for hay, the seeds of which had been sown the preceding year with the barley; and sixtth it is sown with oats." In 1809, James Lamb was living at Falkirk, perhaps on a farm on the Callendar Estate, when he married Elizabeth McFarlane, of Mid Frew in the Parish of Kilmadock. A New Beginning. For James Lamb and Elizabeth McFarlane the year 1809 began with the proclamation of their intention to marry. The entry in the parochial register of the Parish of Kilmadock reads: January 1st 1809. The said day James Lamb, in the Parish afFal/rt'rk and Elisabeth Mcfarlan (sic) In this parish, declared their purpose of marriage and were married the 201}: January, The proclamation was also entered in the parochial register of the Parish of F alkirk, January 8th 1809, James Lamb in this parish and Elizabeth Maefarlarte (sic) in the parish of Kilmadock, In Scottish tradition at that time, the wedding was probably held at the home of the brideâs family, When family and friends had gathered, the parish minister arrived to conduct the marriage service. This was followed by a feast for all and much merriment. The bride and groom left for their home in Falkirk. A Move to The Mass. Conï¬icting evidence surrounds the birth of their ï¬rst child, a son named John, John Lamb's family Bible in Canada records his birth as October 1, 1809 at Falkirk, His baptism is recorded in the register of the Parish of Kineardine, 8th October 1809, John, son to James Lamb and Elisabeth Mcfarlane (sic), Drip, Drip, one of the cleared mosses east of Blair Drummond Moss, is given as the 30 -------------- --------------- residence of the family, Yet John Lamb's gravestone in Beechwood Cemetery, Ottawa, Canada, states that he was born November 9th, 1809 at Falkirk, Scotland A daughter, Elisabeth, was baptized, August 2nd, 1811, when the family was still living on Drip Moss. Elisabeth did not emigrate to Canada and it is believed she died young in Scotland. A letter of recommendation brought to Canada by James Lamb written in 1831 by Alexander Blackadder, a Land Valuator arid surveyor of Stirling states: That James Lamb, the Bearer hereof was one of my form Servants and with his wife and family resided on my farm from Martinmass (November llth) 1812 to Martinmass 1815, after which time I had no occasion for any such servants, During that period I have every reason to think he served me faithfully, soberly, and peaceably, and himself and his family very industrious and frugal During this period, James Lamb and Elizabeth McFarlane had a daughter, Helen, baptized on the 15th of August, 1813, and a son, William, baptized on the 6th of August, 1815. Both children were bom at Moss Farm on Blair Drummond Moss in the Parish of Kincardine. Blackadder's letter continues, Since the latter period (Martinmass 1815) I know that he farmed a portion of the ground on his own Account from my knowing him intimately and also his family for upwards of Eighteen years past 1 can honestly recommend them as worthy of every conï¬dence and as able to practise agricultural operations as practised in the best cultivated districts of Scotland This statement seems to indicate that James Lamb had been able to purchase a lease for his own farm on Blair Drummond Moss in 1815, probably on West Wood Lane near his old neighbour on the Latchet, Daniel Ferguson, Here, four children were born: Ann, baptized on the 6th of August 1817; Margaret, the 19th of October 1820; Janet, the 6th of April 1824; and James on the 26th of August 1828. Sahool Days. The Drummonds had built a school on Blair Drummond Moss for the Moss children. The school-teacher taught in both Gaelic and English, so that the children were bilingual. Oral family history tells of William Lamb attending school at Bridge of Allan, a town on the east side of Allan Water about two miles north of Stirling. In later years, William Lamb renewed a friendship with John Ferguson who settled in Osgoode Township, U C. and who had also attended the same school. The eldest son, John, must have been impressed by the Great Wheel at Torr, so close to his home on the Moss. About age 14, he was apprenticed to a millwn'ght, a relatively new trade, which usually took seven years. In that time he would learn the architectural and mechanical skills to design and plan not only water wheels but also mill buildings, dams and other mill machinery. 31 -------------- --------------- ! %A , jv/W/ï¬wé/v i ' /o///M///a/a 1; ' c/W MK ww/éézâwââ A A M» 1 W / J g/iZLM yï¬m/wwé ' z éï¬w /flf¢ 69 . ï¬u!â _ g â3% 7%â; MM s M M . ' / Lener of Recommendation brought to Canada by James Lamb, 1831. 32 -------------- --------------- Life on The Moss In the New Statistical Account of Scotland, published shortly aï¬er the Lambs had emigrated to Canada, Rev. Christopher Tait, of the Parish of Kincardine, wrote about the people of the Moss. He included one of the few accounts of the women living on the farms. A mixture of the Scotch and English language is spoken by the original inhabitants of this parish and Gaelic and English by the moss population who settled here from the commencement of the moss improvement. They are a sober, industrious, contented, enterprising and successful people and generally unexceptional in their moral and religious character. The number of farmers, cottars and farm-servants, exclusive of the moss, is 110, and the number of such labourers in the moss, is 110 Although the able-bodied portion of the population are employed in field labour, yet such as are conï¬ned to their houses during the winter season, are employed in thrashing grain, feeding cattle, and keeping in order every thing connected with their farming establishments. The females, in particular, are occupied in needlework, knitting stockings, spinning ï¬ax and wool, making coarse kinds of dresses for themselves and their families; in carrying eggs, fowls, butter and cheese to the market; and in bringing in return, things necessary for domestic use The system of small wheel spinning and hand-loom weaving, which used to prevail in this parish as in other parts of Scotland, has been superseded by machinery in the cotton and woolen marrufactories Much time is spent during a great portion of the year in carting peats and produce to various places. The sale of pears was formerly carried on by all the moss people, and engaged much of their time and attention, and was found to be so proï¬table that in some years Individuals have been known to realize from it as much as 40£ Sterling the colony (on the Moss) increased in prosperity until they became in many instances so independent in their circumstances, as to become farmers on a larger scale. Sound: on the Moss. Aside from the usual sounds of people and the cattle, horses, hens, pigs and cats, the latter kept to reduce vemiin such as the mice and rats that lived in the moss, two other sounds were remembered later by emigrants to Canada, Every so often when the sluice gates opened, a great swish of water was heard sweeping along the channels from the Great Wheel at Torr, some two miles away. The power of the water washed the loosened moss, vegetation and peat down the channels to the Forth and out to sea, The other sound remembered came from the heights of the Rock of Stirling. It was the pealing of the church bells waï¬ing across the valley, telling the time in a musical way. 33 -------------- --------------- Membership Certiï¬cate in the Congregational Church in Stirling for James Lamb and his wife - 1831. . _ I âl/ W _/ 34 -------------- --------------- Congregationalists in Stirling. In August of 1804, eleven people in Stirling. who had been meeting for fellowship and prayer as early as 1797, opened a church based on Congregational principles: freedom to interpret the truth of the Bible under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, openness and tolerance towards others with different, distinctive beliefs, and local responsibility for church organization and property. The Congregationalists differed chieï¬y from the Church of Scotland over the form of church government. Congregationalists wanted a church governed by local members free from the power and authority exercised through the Church of Scotland presbyteries and local church sessions, the latter composed of the minister and a few niling elders, elected for life. Even the Congregationalists had their differences. In 1808, in a split over infant or adult baptism, some congregations became Baptist. It is not known when James Lamb and Elizabeth McFarlane became members of the Congregational Church in Stirling. A Certiï¬cate of Church Membership, signed by the minister, Rev. Alex, Marshall, and dated 22nd of March 1831, says: They have been long members of the Congregational Church here, under my care. They have conducted themselves with uniform propriety, to the entire satisfaction of the Church, who all join with me in regretting their departure. They are cordially recommended to the fellowship of any Christian Church wherever Providence may cast their lot. This certiï¬cate was found in James Lamb's Bible which was brought to Canada in 1831. A Voice from the Wilderness. The wilderness was Clarence Township on the Ottawa River in Upper Canada. The voice was that of John Edwards, born in Morayshire, Scotland in 1779. While apprenticing as a ship's carpenter in Leith, he attended a service in an Independent church in nearby Edinburgh where James Haldane was the minister. Edwards was convened to the Independent (Congegational) cause and became a lay preacher on Sundays. Aï¬er the split in 1808, Edwards became a Baptist. In 1819, with his wife and three sons, he sailed for Upper Canada where he found work in the naval yards at Kingston In 1823, the Edwards family accompanied by three other families settled on land at Fox's Point in Clarence Township on the south shore of the Ottawa River. The four families were all ardent Baptists and founding members of the ï¬rst Baptist church in the Ottawa Valley. Whenever he could, John Edwards was in his canoe travelling up and down the Ottawa River or following blazed trails through the forest to meet new settlers oï¬en holding services in their homes. The need seemed overwhelming. In fall of 1829 Edwards decided to return to England and Scotland to seek help from the churches there. From the time of his arrival he received a warm reception wherever he went On March 22, 1830, Edwards met with a group of churchmen in Edinburgh, including James Haldane. Using the biblical story in the book of Acts, chapter 16, verse 9, where the man from Macedonia asks Paul to "come over and help us," Edwards told of the need for ministers and lay people to bring the Christian faith to the 35 -------------- --------------- Skilled Spinners and Weavers Three generations of Scottish women preparing the wool for weaving; the daughter carding the wool, the mother spinning the carded wool into yarn, the grandmother winding the yam into skeins for washing before weaving. Most Scottish country women learned these skills at an early age. This spinning wheel is almost identical to the spinning wheel made in Stirling and brought to Canada by Elizabeth MeFarlane in 1831. Today her spinning wheel is in the possession of a Lamb-Peel descendant living in Phoenix, Arizona. 36 -------------- --------------- settlers in Canada. He speciï¬cally asked the group to help him ï¬nd two ministers, either Baptist or Independent (Congregationalist) who would come to Canada, one to work with Baptist people in Montreal; the other who could speak both Gaelic and English to serve the Scots settled in Glengarry County. After some discussion, the group agreed to form a committee âfor the purpose of cooperating with friends in other parts throughout Britain, with a view of procuring suitable persons for the work, and of raising the necessary funds. " In April 1830, John Edwards sailed for Canada, accompanied by two Baptist ministers, Rev. John Gilmour, of Aberdeen, who became minister of First Baptist Church in Montreal, and Rev. William Fraser, of Invemess«shire, who served the Baptist Church in Glengarry County for many years. Changes Everywhere The early part of the 19th century was a time of social and economic change in Scotland, With the establishment of more and more industry in the towns and cities, the population was leaving the farms for work in the mills and factories. Although the moss farms were very productive, the price of farm produce was low and could not support an increasing population. Emigration was one solution many considered. In 1830, Duncan King, his wife, Kathrine McNaughton, and their ï¬ve children, Margaret, John and his wife, Elisabeth Taylor, Elisabeth, Peter and Robert, who were neighbours of the Lambs on Blair Drummond Moss, emigrated to Clarence Twp. in Upper Canada, Perhaps James Lamb heard John Edwardâs invitation to "come over and help us. " Within a year, James Lamb and his family had made plans to emigrate to Upper Canada. The farm had to be sold. John Lamb's apprenticeship was not quite ï¬nished. Arrangements had to be made, âcosting a tidy sum of moneyâ as his niece, Dorothy Lamb, once reported, so he could leave Scotland with the family, Papers from Alexander Marshall, the minister of the Congregational Church, and from Alexander Blackadder, a former employer, were gathered. Household and farm equipment was packed and goodbyes were said. Farewell Among their personal belongings were Elizabethâs small spinning wheel made in Stirling and James Lamb's Bible, a large leather bound volume, On the inside front cover of his Bible, James had written these words, which must have had a personal meaning for him "Ferwell Hymn. Ferwell my dear breathren the time is at hand that we must be " These words are part of the ï¬rst verse of a well»known 19th century hymn, titled The Farewell Hymn. It speaks with tenderness about leaving home and ï¬iends in the old country, and also with an abiding trust in divine providence and hope for reunion, if not in this life, in the life beyond death, Farewell my dear brethren, the time is at hand, When we must be parted from this social band; Our several engagements now call us away, Our parting Ilr need/ill and we must obey. 37 -------------- --------------- Farewell my dear brethren, farewell for a while, We may all meet again, if kind Providence smile; But when we are parted and scattered abroad, We â11 pray for each other, and wrestle with God It was an emotional time when family and friends gathered to say farewell and many may have wished that they could change their minds. The words of this hymn express the faith that though parted they can pray for each other and meet again in the aï¬erlife. Another personal item found in James' Bible was a folded paper cut out to form a geometric design, perhaps made by one of the children The paper has a watermark indicating its manufacture in 1826. In late March or early April of 1831, James Lamb and Elizabeth McFarlane and their seven children, John, 21 years old; Helen, 17', William, 15; Ann, 13', Margaret, 10; Janet, 7; and James, almost 3 years old, sailed for Montreal and Upper Canada. itlktttik 38 -------------- --------------- PART II - CANADA LAMBS OF THE LOWER OTTAWA MONTREAL T0 LOCHABER BA Y: Search for a New Home. In June of 1831, James Lamb and his family arrived in Montreal, Lower Canada, after a nine weeks voyage from Scotland by sailing ship, Montreal on the eastern side of the Island of Montreal, was a town clustered around its harbour, with a population of about 40,000 souls, In the 1820's the harbour had been improved and the channel deepened to allow larger ships to dock. The month of June in Canada brought the heat of summer and with it hordes of ï¬ies and mosquitoes, believed to be the cause of most summer diseases. Many emigrants, who had escaped various ailments on their Atlantic crossing, thought it wise to move through Montreal and on to their ï¬nal destination as quickly as possible; the majority going to Upper Canada by way of the St. Lawrence River and Lake Ontario. The St. Lawrence River Route By 1831, rear or side wheel paddle steamers travelled the smooth water sections of the St. Lawrence River and stage coaches carried passengers around the rapids sections on portage roads. This meant ï¬ve changes from steamer to stage between Montreal and Prescott, Upper Canada. From Montreal it was 9 miles by stage to Lachine; then 24 miles by steamer to Cascades; 16 miles by stage to Coteau du Lac; 30 miles by steamer to Cornwall in Upper Canada; 12 miles by stage to Dickinson's Landing and ï¬nally 58 miles by steamer to Prescott; a total distance of 149 miles which took about 30 hours travelling time Durham boats also operated on the St. Lawrence River, They were ï¬at»bottomed barges eighty to ninety feet in length with a nine or ten foot beam, rounded at the bow with a cargo capacity of thirty to forty tons. Sometimes pulled by cars, pushed by poles or propelled by sails, these boats were slow travellers. There was little space for passengers and crew; the only coverings in wet weather were tarpaulins. At the foot of rapids the cargo had to be off-loaded and the boat tracked or pulled up the rapids, then the cargo reloaded at the head of the rapids. By 1830 Durham boats were used almost exclusively for cargo, olt times towed along in smooth water by the steamers In Early Lochaber Bay. Dorothy Lamb wrote that aï¬er landing in Montreal, âJames Lamb loaded his family on Saturday in canoes or boats and sent them on ahead up the St. Lawrence intending to settle in Upper Canada.â It seems more likely that the family travelled up the St Lawrence River by stage and steamer, possibly their belongings following by Durham boat. Leaving Montreal on Saturday, the family would arrive in Prescott on Sunday aï¬emoon. Prescott, situated at the head of the rapids on the St. Lawrence River, became a busy port for transhipping goods from river boats to larger vessels plying the upper river and Lake Ontario. This area was settled by United Empire Loyalists aï¬er 1800. Here Elizabeth and their family waited for James Lamb to arrive. 39 -------------- --------------- .2â: . aimâSSH 8.5.36 2 $30M 521 M555 9; 3:233 am 30m 5.49m van; BNZ ¢ ï¬ivroab <Q<Z<o mung gig... u§53 85:6 . BAR! âENDED <Q<Z<U g0; 40 -------------- --------------- A Surprise Meanwhile, in Montreal, on Sunday morning, James Lamb made his way to First Baptist Church on St. Helen Street, to attend Sunday worship, The minister was Rev. John Gilmour, formerly of Aberdeen, who had come to Canada a year earlier accompanying John Edwards as far as Montreal. After the service, James Lamb inquired of Mr. Gilmour how to ï¬nd John Edwards in Upper Canada and learned to his surprise that there were two river-roads to Upper Canada, the St. Lawrence River on which his family were travelling and the Ottawa River where John Edwards lived. Although Dorothy Lamb wrote that James Lamb "started on foot along the shores of the St, Lawrence and caught up to his family at Prescott," he probably took the faster route, by stage and steamer. In less than two days, James Lamb would meet his family in Prescott. New Travel Plans From Prescott there were two possible routes to Clarence Twp. The first was to return down the St. Lawrence River to Lachine and take another steamer up the Ottawa River about 40 miles to Carillon, then by stage to Grenville, a distance of 12 miles and ï¬nally by steamer to Whitcombeâs Wharf, L,C., across the river from John Edwardsâ home in Clarence Twp, U,C The alternate route was across country, northward through the sparsely settled forest, to Kemptville, at that time merely a cluster of mills and dwellings, near the south branch of the Rideau River, then down the Rideau by canoe to Bytown. It was decided that Elizabeth and the six youngest children would return to Lachine and travel up the Ottawa River to Whitcombeâs Wharf. James and their eldest son, John, would take the shorter route northward through the forest to the Rideau River and Bytown with Indian guides. The distance from Prescott to Kemptville was some thirty miles, a two-day walk through the forest following a blazed trail. From Kemptville it was a short distance to the Rideau River where the Royal Engineers of the British Army under Col. John By, had been building dams and canal locks for ï¬ve years to provide a navigable alternative to the St. Lawrence River between Bytown and Kingston The Rideau Canal, almost completed in 1831, opened to trafï¬c a year later. It was a relatively easy trip by canoe from Kemptville to Bytown, taking six to eight hours with tluee short portages. The ï¬rst was at Long Island where a dam and three locks had been built. The second went around a low dam and a single lock at Black Rapids. The last portage was at the Prince of Wales Falls, more commonly known as Hog's Back Falls. Below the locks at Hogâs Baclg the canal continued separately from the river, cutting across ï¬at swampy land to a beaver pond, later called Dow's Lake, the source of Sleighâs Creek which ï¬owed northward to the Ottawa River. Here, eight locks lowered the water into Sleigh's Bay, later renamed Entrance Bay, separating Upper Bytown from Lower Bytown. From Hogâs Back the Rideau River ï¬owed gently to its mouth between Lower Bytown and the newly laid-out village of New Edinburgh. There a large island divided the river, the water falling in two streams over a limestone cliff producing a spectacular view 41 -------------- --------------- â32 âsex 8:233 Am 2: :0 exam 525D was 5:8va 42 -------------- --------------- from the Ottawa River below. The French gave these waterfalls their name, the Rideau or Curtain Falls. New Edinburgh About 1830, Thomas McKay, a masonry contractor for the Rideau Canal, acquired 1000 acres of land on the east side of the Rideau River where it entered the Ottawa. He named his new community, New Edinburgh Born in Perth, Scotland in 1772, McKay became a master stonemason and came with his family to Montreal in 1817 where he joined with John Redpath to build the masonry work on the Lachine Canal. In 1826, Col. John By sent for McKay and Redpath to supervise the masonry work on the Rideau Canal, About the time James Lamb and his son, John, arrived in Bytown in 1831, McKay was building a sawmill on his land along the Rideau River. Here John, now twenty-one years old and trained as a millwright, was offered employment and decided to remain in New Edinburgh. Down the Ottawa Leaving John at New Edinburgh, James Lamb followed a road west along the top of the cliffs overlooking the Ottawa River, in later times called Sussex Drive, to Nepean Point, Here a path led down the cliff to the steamer landing on Entrance Bay. The steamer made daily trips down river to Grenville and back. As the steamer made its way out into the channel, up-river the mighty falls of the Chaudiere could be seen. To the south of the great falls, several islands separated smaller waterfalls. Toward the north, a much greater volume of water lept with a roar of thunder over a rocky arc-shaped ledge into a chuming cauldron below, giving it the name, the Chaudiere or kettle. Moving out into the current of the river, it was smooth water all the way to Grenville. The steamer passed below the cliffs where the Rideau Falls disappeared into the Ottawa River, Downstream almost opposite Rideau Falls, the Gatineau River, rising some two hundred miles to the north entered the Ottawa through a low marshy delta, Eastward, the south shore of the Ottawa became a high clay bank with some rocky outcrops near Cumberland and Rockland. The north shore is ï¬atter with ponds and marshes along the shoreline. On the north side of the channel, a number of low sandy islands constantly change their shape with the river current. About sixteen miles east of the Gatineau delta, the Liévre River enters the Ottawa from the north, followed a few miles further east by the smaller Riviere Blanche, wending its way through the marsh bordering the north shore. Just east of the Blanche, the steamer stopped at Whitcombeâs Wharf. Across the river on the south shore was Foxâs Point and Clarence Twp, Upper Canada, the home of John Edwards, Finally James Lamb had found the man who was âthe voice from the wildemess.â LochaberBay Yet another disappointment was waiting for James Lamb, There was no land available in Clarence Twp, However, Neil Campbell, a member of the Baptist Church in Clarence who had settled across the river in Lochaber Twp, Lower Canada in 1828, agreed to sell part of his land. A deal was made and James Lamb purchased the western 43 -------------- --------------- mm: âo maimgoh 59225 E; 8:050 E B>E âago 2: was? EuEï¬ï¬m <Q<Z<U EAan «=5: 22.38 Am 52 a 5.50 .300: a SE 6 P350 uï¬is s 2E .3335: .23 a one: a: 5392 238 .n gaggim E: ,q 8%: 9: ï¬faï¬u .52 .m 5:5 3:1: E; a 2528M (6 Each 325 3.5: m3 i=5 8...: H 32%.: g ".538: a 8.3 555 as u... as as? 2.: 26 . 23m 91:38. 8555 t awnâEV 86:5 <Q<Z<o mmBOA aimch Each 95:; baneâ8; 44 -------------- --------------- half of Lot 22, on Range 2, some 135 acres including riparian rights on Lochaber Bay, The bay was a shallow widening of the Ottawa River, really a marsh bordering the north shore, the nesting grounds of great ï¬ocks of waterfowl From the edge of the marsh the land, covered with forest, rose slightly forming a low ridge, known as Bay Hill, then dipping down into a small creek running parallel to the shore line. On the other side of the creek, the land rose some ï¬fty feet to a ridge above the river, The forest was everywhere; only blazed trails led from one settlerâs clearing to the next. Here James Lamb was joined by Elizabeth and their children at their new home in the wilderness, Helen was almost 18 years of age; William,15; Ann, 13; Margaret, ll; Janet, 6; and James, nearly 3 James Lamb & Elizabeth McFarlane Build a Home on Bay Hill The earliest settlers, Neil, James and Donald Campbell and their families, who came in 1828, cleared enough land to build their log houses on Bay Hill. The latter was a wide ridge perhaps six miles long bordering the marshy banks of Lochaber Bay, about twenty or thirty feet above high water. Probably the ï¬rst Lamb house was built three or four hundred feet west of Neil Campbell's house on James Lamb's recently purchased half of Lot 22. Several hundred feet east of Neil Campbellâs property was the site of the ï¬rst schoolhouse on Bay Hill. Duncan McDemiid, a strict disciplinarian, was the ï¬rst teacher. Although his family spoke only Gaelic, Duncan had been educated in English before coming to Canada. His pay was $5.00 a month and board; a week with each student's family. Duncan McDennid was the teacher of the younger Lamb children, probably Ann, Margaret, Janet and James. Bay Hill was also the site of the ï¬rst cemetery situated between the property of Neil Campbell and James Lamb, 1n the winter of 1829, the Quebec Government, granted money for a road to be built along the north shore of the Ottawa River between Grenville and Hull. Through Lochaber Township, the road followed the length of Bay Hill to the Blanche River. The condition of the road was another matter. Rev John King, a Baptist minister, writing in his Journal in later years, recalls the time he was a student serving the Baptist congregations at Lochaber Bay and Petite Nation in 1841. The distance between the two places being ï¬fteen miles, with the North Nation (river) to cross, it was arranged that I should spend alternate weeks in each place. In Petite Nation, 0r Papineauville, as it is now called, there was then a small Baptist church Travelling between Lochaber and Petite Nation 1 found rather a laborious undertaking, on account of the state of the roads --- the only one that was fairly passable being that ï¬om the Nation (river) to Papineauville. From the Nation (river) to Lochaber, in the spring and fall, it was little better than a quagmire. Sometimes I would get a ride from Pupineauville to the Nation (river) and walk the rest of the way, and often was halfway up to the knees in mud Occasionally I did procure a horse at Lochaber Bay, but getting a saddle was another thing; horses were plentiï¬rl enough, but saddles were few and far between; and as for a buï¬alo robe in sleighing time, that was out of the question; the only robes they used were bed-quilts When I travelled that road, there 45 -------------- --------------- was no Thurso and no mill on the Blanche (river), In the early years of settlement, the Ottawa River provided a much more reliable means of travel than the new road. Complications Shortly after purchasing his land, James Lamb discovered that Neil Campbell did not hold clear title to his land and therefore could not legally sell any part of it. At this time when a settler applied for a grant of Crown land he was given a Location Ticket stating the conditions he must fulï¬ll before being granted clear title. Usually this meant clearing and fencing several acres, building a house and living on his land for a stated period of time, often three years, Neil Campbell had not completed all the conditions of his Location Ticket. Gaining clear title to his land proved to be a costly legal complication for James Lamb, taking several years. Rejected When Sunday arrived, the Lambs, members of the Congregational Church in Scotland, joined their Baptist neighbours for worship, probably at the schoolhouse built on Bay Hill, To their surprise, they were asked to leave because, in the eyes of their neighbours, they were not properly baptized. Baptists believed in total immersion as adults. The Lambs had been baptized in infancy, This rejection, no doubt, conï¬rmed James Lamb and his wife, Elizabeth McFarlane, as life-long Independents or Congregationalists. James became associated with the schoolteacher, Duncan McDermid, a Presbyterian. The two men oï¬en walked to Papineauville, about 15 miles east along the shore of the Ottawa River, and to Silver Creek, some 4 miles northwest of Lochaber, where they had Sunday schools and held services of worship. Two Family Weddings On March 25th, 1834, James and Elizabethâs eldest daughter, Helen, almost 21 years of age, married John Simpson Edwards, a young Scot who had settled on Lot C, 9th Concession of Clarence Twp.s Almost two years later, the eldest son of James and Elizabeth Lamb, John, who now worked as a millwright in the Hamilton Mills at Hawkesbury, U.C. married, Mary Dewar of St. Andrews, Argenteuil County, L.C.6 The Great Revival In 1835, the Baptists held special services throughout a wide area of the Ottawa valley, led by Rev. John Edwards, assisted by Rev William Fraser of Glengarry and Rev John Gilmour of Montreal. This revival resulted in the conversion of many to the Baptist 5 See Helen Lamb and John S. Edwards Family, p, 52. 6 See John Lamb undMnry Dewar Family, p. 76. 46 -------------- --------------- cause. It may have been at this time, William Lamb, then about twenty years of age, decided to join the Baptists His father, James, was so distressed with the idea, that William packed his belongings and started to leave home. His mother, Elizabeth, called him back, saying such a step was not needed. A truce was made, but William, his younger brother, James, and his sisters, Helen, Ann, Margaret and Janet, all became Baptists. Not long after, William took up fanning across the river in Clarence Township. Pioneer Days In her article, Early Lochaber Bay, Dorothy Lamb describes the early years in the community: Little by little small clearings appeared in the forest usually on the higher [and because of better drainage, the oxen drawing the home-made harrows, made with wood or iron pins inserted into the wood. Among the stumps small patches of grain were sown and very carefully garnered by sickle, and later by cradle, and bound by hand Potash, the only means of procuring cash, was made by the laborious method of cutting and piling hardwood logs, then dry burning them, and gathering up the ashes, and putting them in covered bins till they were ready to leach them, The leaches were made out of hollowed logs placed in horizontal positions, one higher and the other a little lower so that when the water was poured on the ashes, the lye could escape, dripping down into the troughs. The lye was placed in large potash kettles to be boiled down into a powder which was packed in strong barrels to the amount of 500 lbs In the winter the settlers loaded two barrels on their one horse jumper (sleigh) and started for Montreal, a distance of nearly 100 miles, to dispose of their product for which. they received 840 to $50 per barrel During the winter, hundreds of one horse jumpers would be employed hauling supplies to Bytown, Perth and up the Rideau to Kingston, which was then a military post. The settlers situated along the river were more fortunate in keeping stopping places and more easily able to dispose of their farm produce for cash. Dorothy tells of another adventure of some neighbours who decided they needed a large canoe to go to the grist mill at Hawkesbury and to church across the river at Clarence. They cut a large pine tree and hollowed out a canoe thirty feet long where it fell in the forest. In order to launch the canoe, a road had to be cut through the forest to the bay A number of oxen were hitched to the canoe to pull it down to the water's edge. Then they loaded their wheat into the canoe and paddled downstream to the grist mill at Hawkesbury. Paddling upstream with their load of ground wheat did not appeal to them. Spotting a steamer called the Phoenix, they asked the captain if he would tow their canoe upriver to Whitcombâs Wharf. He gave them his price saying he would be leaving at daybreak and their canoe must be tied and ready to leave. In the moming the captain took a look their 47 -------------- --------------- canoe and said, âI bargained to tow a canoe, not a barge!â Ablaze! Chimney ï¬res were a constant hazard in the days of log houses with chimneys built of local stone. Many settlers kept barrels of water close by and ladders against the roof, ready to douse a small ï¬re, More oï¬en the roof caught ï¬re from sparks ï¬âom an overheated chimney and the whole house was ablaze in minutes. In 1838, the Lamb home burned to the ground. Only a few items, James Lamb's large Bible, brought from Scotland, Elizabethâs little spinning wheel made in Stirling and some small utensils were saved At times of tragedy neighbours helped one another Before long the Lambs had a new one and a half storey log house. Friendly Fire A neighbour of the Lambs at Lochaber Bay, Russell MacCallum, recalled this story of the early days: I remember hearing that Mr, James lamb (1778-1855) had the happy knack of keeping his fires banked in such a way that they never died out. This was important in the days before matches. Old John MacLachIan, the father of the blind boys, sometimes sent his daughter, Mary, with an iron pot, down to Mr, Lambâs on bitterly cold mornings, to beg a few live coals, The footpath, in those days, would be a Zigzag line from one neighbourâs door to the next As Mary came to my grandfatherir (Malcolm MacCallum) house, the door would open and Malcolm would poke his head out, 'Mary, " he would say, "our ï¬res are out. Would you bring me back a few coals from Mr. Lamb?â The 1842 Census of Lochaber Township In this census, James Lamb is listed as owner of 150 acres on Lot 22, Range 2, of which 36 acres were improved or cultivated. From these 36 acres, the 1841 harvest, measured in Winchester bushels was: wheat, 14; oats 130; pease 14; Indian com, 3 and potatoes, 100. There were 14 neat or domestic cattle, 3 horses, 16 sheep and 6 hogs kept on the farm. Although James Lamb is the only name listed, there were 7 people, all natives of Scotland, living in the house, noted as being rebuilt in 1838. Other produce, largely the work of women who did most of the spinning and weaving, consisted of 11 yards of fulled cloth, 16 yards of ï¬annel or woolen cloth, not fulled, woven from 20 lbs of wool as well as maple sugar and honey. Spinning, Weaving and Walking Most Scottish country women had learned as children to card, spin and weave wool and when older, to walk/waulk or hill the woven woolen cloth, all skills they brought with them to Canada, Often they had bees when they gathered relatives and friends to do these tasks together, all speaking and singing in lilting Gaelic the traditional spinning and walking songs. 48 -------------- --------------- Walking/waulking was a process for cleansing and thickening or shrinking the cloth. A length of woven cloth was washed and with most of the water removed, placed in an oval around a long table. Seated around the table, the women kneaded the wet cloth with their hands, moving the cloth along to the next person to the rhythm of the walking song. When ï¬nished, the cloth was hung up to dry. The product was now ï¬illed cloth, ready to be made into shawls, blankets or clothes for the family. Dorothy Lamb notes that later ï¬ax was grown, to be spun and woven into linen cloth for sheets, towels and other household needs. The Depression of the 1840s In the 18305 and the early 18405 there was a lot of prosperity in the Ottawa Valley largely due to the boom created by the construction of the Rideau Canal. Farm products were in great demand and prices were good, Timothy hay, oats, pork and beef sold to the lumber companies for their lumber camps was a good source of farm cash income. Overseas timber exports brought a great deal of wealth. But in 1848 there was an economic downturn that :11?th farm income in the Ottawa valley, This economic downturn could not have lasted too long. In 1851, John A. Cameron and his brother George W. Cameron built a saw and planing mill on the east side of the Blanche River. The mills offered employment to men from farms in the valley. Soon a village housing the mill workers and their families began to grow on the land south and east of the mills. The new community was given the name of Thurso, Joys and Sorrows The next few years brought many changes in the Lamb family; a mixture of joys and sorrows. About 1848, Margaret Lamb married John McLean, the son of Donald McLean and Janet McCallum who had settled on Lot 19, Range 3 of Lochaber Twp. in 1829 7 On February 5th,1852, Elizabeth McFarlane Lamb died at her home on Bay Hill. She was buried across the river in the Protestant Cemetery on McCaulâs Point, later a part of the Town of Rockland. There were two weddings in the Lamb family in 1854, Janet Lamb married Alexander McLean, a brother of John McLean.â In June, Ann Lamb and Alexander Gordon were married at Papineauville (Petite Nation). They settled on the Lachute Road, near St. Andrews in Argenteuil Co. where Alexander farmed with his father, John Gordon. Alexander was the only son of John Gordon and Helen Dewar. Less than a year later, on April 14th, 1855, Ann and her baby died during childbirth. She was buried with the Gordon family in St. Andrews Cemetery. Several years later Alexander remarried and emigrated to Mendocino County, California. He died there in 1915. 7 See Margaret Lamb and John McLean Family, p. 63, â See Janet Lamb and Alex McLean Family, p, 64 49 -------------- --------------- z .. huï¬az 589.35% 3:550 2% \e 3% E25355 2: Soc .22 .o EEEEH 5593:: £82 a 8:25 we En 552 t 5:. âEm WDZEAO . 239â. 3:533 e5 .5 3 .m sagging .0 V.â ssï¬ a 55.6 .253 35E .m km .3553 s bu.qu eï¬nsgnou: ~ 2%. a; £53 6 â0% 2E5 @338 ._ 50 -------------- --------------- Although the date is not known, sometime in 1854 or 1855, William Lamb the second son of James Lamb and Elizabeth McFarlane, married Margaret Gordon, daughter of John Gordon and Helen Dewar, and sister of Alexander Gordon.9 On June 9th, 1855, James Lamb, age 77 years died at his home on Bay Hill, He was buried beside his wife, Elizabeth, in the cemetery on McCaulâs Point, across the river His death marked the end of a generation. Only his son James was left at Lochaber Bay. The last in the family to marry was young James. On a number of visits to his sister, Margaret, in Osnabruck Twp, James met Sarah Ann Baker, daughter of James Baker and Margaret Gallingher. They were married at Osnabruck on June 27th, 1855.â0 McCaulâs Cemetery/Rockland Protestant Cemetery Like many pioneer burying grounds, McCaulâs Cemetery began on the farm hillside of an early settler, Alexander McCaul, who gave the site, probably in the 1830s The cemetery continued in an informal way until 1870 when a deed was given to James McCaul and his heirs, in trust, for a burying ground for the "burial of the dead of all Protestant Christian denominations." The McCaul farm became part of the village, and then the town, of Rockland. The cemetery, known as the Rockland Protestant Cemetery, was located north of the village on Mill Street, now Edwards Street, on the road that led from the village down to the south shore of the Ottawa River. Gradually, over the years, the Protestant population decreased, especially aï¬er the closure of the WC, Edwards & Co. lumber mills The cemetery was largely forgotten and neglected. Aï¬er the Second World War, the population of Rockland began to increase. Soon new homes surrounded the old cemetery, When Mill Street was rebuilt, earth from the steep hillside cemetery washed onto the new road with every rain. Under provisions of the Ontario Cemeteries Act, the town graded the sloping cemetery with a bulldozer and piled the broken gravestones into a jumbled heap in a back corner, News of this action travelled quickly. In the 19505, Walter Lamb of Ottawa heard of the bulldozing of the cemetery, and with his son, Bill, went to Rockland. They found the gravestone of James Lamb and Elizabeth McFarlane broken off at the top but still standing and arranged to have it photographed, While the name, James Lamb was missing, the lower part read, June - 1855 net 77 yrs. Also His Wife, Elizabeth McFarlane DIED Feb 5, 1852 ae. 66yrs. Natives of Thomhill Perlhshire Scotland The publicity of the bulldozing of the cemetery in the 19605 brought both criticism g See William Lamb and Margaret Gordon Family, p. 58 1° See James Lamb andSaralr Baker Family, p, 67, 51 -------------- --------------- and suggestions for the ï¬lture, Some thought the cemetery should become a memorial park with a cairn built with the broken gravestones, but this was never done, The cemetery was fenced and planted with grass by the town; the remaining broken gravestones still piled in a comer covered with poison ivy, A 1994 Visit to the cemetery revealed further destruction of the gravestones. Only a small triangle of the original Lamb gravestone with the words, Thomhill and Scotland remained; the rest of the gravestone had disappeared. Today the visitor sees only a fenced, grassy slope from the street. There is nothing to say that this was once a pioneer cemetery. The small pile of broken stones in the back comer are the only clue to its past and some of the people who were buried here. ******* Helen Lamb and John S. Edwards Family Helen Lamb born in 1815, was the eldest daughter of James Lamb and Elizabeth McFarlane to come to Canada in 183]. Three years later, on March 25th, 1834, after the publication of banns, Rev. John Edwards, the minister of Clarence Baptist Church, oï¬iciated at the marriage of Helen Lamb and John Simpson Edwards. The witnesses were Stephen Tucker and Neil Campbell. John Simpson Edwards, known as Souter, a Scottish name for a shoemaker, a trade he had followed in Scotland, was the son of Alexander Edward and Margaret Simpson of Stotï¬eld, Lossiemouth, Morayshire, Scotland. He was baptized June 26th, 1805 in the Parish Church of Drainie, Souter came to Canada in 1830 and settled on Lot C, Concession 9 of Clarence Twp. at a time when there only 100 settlers in the entire township. His hillside property was not on the river but adjoined several river front lots. Like most early settlers, he probably farmed the land as he cleared it, as well as taking out square timber, Assessment records show that he was able to clear about two additional acres each year, By 1848, he had 20 acres under cultivation and 76 uncultivated; a total of 96 acres. Souter and Helen had six children, Three sons, James Simpson Edwards born in 1835, Alexander Simpson Edwards in 1837, and John Simpson Edwards in 1840 were followed by a daughter, Margaret/ Maggie Edwards in 1843. A fourth son, William Wilkinson Edwards was born in 1847, and the youngest, George Edwards, in 1853 All the family were active participants and regularly attended services at Clarence Baptist church in Clarence Village, about four miles east of their home. On December 28th 1868, Souter Edwards died at the age of 63 years and 6 months. His obituary in the Canadian Baptist refers to him as a man of sterling character. He was buried in Clarence Cemetery. The Next Generation James Simpson Edwards, born in 1835, the eldest son of Souter and Helen, married Catherine Sherwood Roe, daughter of George Brass Roe and Mary Ann Ager, of Clarence Twp. about 1859. In that year he also purchased Lot 31, Rockland/Concession l, in Clarence Twp. consisting of 200 acres, fronting on the Ottawa River. In 1860, James sold 52 -------------- --------------- the west half of Lot 31 to his brother Alex, keeping the east half of 100 acres for his own farm James and Catherine had six children: John born about 1860, George Arthur in 1862, Mary Ann about 1864, Helen in 1867, Elizabeth Margaret about 1869 and Catherine/Katie in 1871. On April 2nd, 1872, a few months after Katie's birth, her mother, Catherine, died suddenly in her 37th year. Catherine was buried in the Rockland Protestant Cemetery on McCaulâs Point. Katie was taken to the William Edwards home and placed in the care of her aunt, Maggie Edwards. Later that year, on August 20th, 1872, James Simpson Edwards married Margaret Johnston Rose, a widow, also of Clarence Twp. They had three children, Ida, Alice and William. Sometime between 1873 and 1881, James, his wife, Margaret, and all their children, except Katie who remained with her Aunt Maggie, moved to western Canada, settling at Melita in southwestern Manitoba. In 1884, James sold his farm at Clarence to his brother, Alex. Margaret died in 1919 and James in 1920. Both are buried in the Melita Cemetery. Alexander/Alex Simpson Edwards, the second son of Souter and Helen, was born in 1837. As a young man he farmed on Lot A, 9th Concession, of Clarence Twp., a short distance south of his fatherâs farm, In 1860, be purchased the west half of Lot 31 from his older brother, James. This property fronted on the Ottawa River. From the shoreline the land rose in gradual steps to a limestone ridge crossing the property on the south, The highest point of the ridge was some 200 feet above the river and referred to as Mount Nebo by the Edwards family aï¬er the biblical story of Moses who saw the promised land from its heights On December lst, 1868, Alex married Elizabeth/Eliza Ann Roe, a school teacher and sister of Catherine Roe Edwards. A few weeks later, on December 28th, 1868 Alexâs father, Souter Edwards died. Alex and Eliza had seven children, Joseph Alexander Edwards, born in 1870, Albert George Edwards in 1872, William Hatton Edwards in 1874, Janet Lamb Edwards in 1876, Mary/lvlinnie Ellen Edwards in 1878, Ethel Georgina Edwards in 1882 and Sarah Roe Edwards in 1886. Aï¬er his brother, James, and his family moved to Manitoba, Alex bought his farm, the east half of Lot 31,which enlarged Alexâs farm to nearly 200 acres. About a century later, Sarah Roe Edwards (1886-1979) who had married Edmund Church in 1917, wrote about her early memories of days on her fatherâs farm. At 91 years of age, Sarah still had a clear memory and a steady hand. She ï¬rst wrote about her mother making butter, My ï¬rst recollection of dairying was mother setting the warm milk in milk pans on the swinging shelf in the basement and when the cream had risen, I remember her skimming it of into the churn each night until there was enough to churn, The butter, she made into neat oval rolls of maybe two pounds, Mother was quite artistic and with her butter ladle, made a pretty fern pattern on the top of the roll. To keep it nice and firm, she washed rhubarb leaves in clear cold spring water, put the butter between the leaves and carried it to her customers in town, Either before that time or when there were more cows to milk, the milk was cooled and 53 -------------- --------------- put into factory cans and taken to Cumberland, a town a few miles west where it was made into cheese. The neighbours took turns in taking the milk to the cheese factory... Sarah also recalled her older brother Albert's apiary, set out between the house and the barn, My brother, Albert, built up quite an apron/H... The bee hives were spread around under a very large , spreading butternut tree between the house and the barn. When it was a good honey season, the ï¬rst box got full early in the summer Another box had to be ï¬lled with ï¬ames with foundation wax already set in them and put on top of the ï¬rst box and lots of times, a third box on top of that. When the honey gathering season was over, came extracting time. The extractor was a large metal barrel with a rack that held four frames on a spindle that was turned at the top, The caps had to be cut oï¬ the filled frames; the frames placed in the rack, then turned slowly at ï¬rst, then faster til all the honey was drained This was repeated as often as needed. The honey drained down to the bottom of the barrel, when that was up to the rack, the honey was drained through a tap into containers. The W.C. Edwards Company had a lumber mill near the Alex Edwards farm. As the mill grew in the 19th century, so did the town of Rockland. This gave Sarah's brother, Albert (1872-1932) another business plan which Sarah describes: Albertâs next project was to start delivering milk in Rockland First of all, Albert delivered milk in Motherâs demi-john (a very large glass jar with a protective covering, a network of twine), Then, as business grew, he took milk in cans with a smaller can with a quart measure fitted in for measuring and as a cover As the town grew, also the number of milk customers, the milk delivery was changed to milk bottles, quarts and pints, and for cream, smaller bottles. Very early in the milk bottles days, Albert built a very large stone stable with stalls and stanchions on one side with water bowls in each stall and a stone silo in one corner, three doors high that was ï¬lled with silage.â There was one corner of the stable fitted up as the dairy with two large tanks ï¬lled with cold water and ice for cooling the milk after it had been put through an aerator into bottles and the bottles put into crates... The crates were put into the tanks of cold water, ready for delivery next morning, early... Some deliveries had to be made before going to the wharf to deliver milk to the two passenger boats running from Thurso to Ottawa daily coming to Rock/and at 7 oâclock, then continuing the rest of the milk delivery, arriving home any time after ten oâclock. The milk that came back had to be warmed and separated. That cream was churned and made into butter prints, mostly sold to the milk customers, 54 -------------- --------------- Sarah Edwards Church was not the only one in her family to write about bygone days on the Edwards farm. Sarahâs older sister, Minnie Ellen Edwards, had married James Thomson, of Thurso, Quebec, in 1904. Their son, Loyal Alexander Thomson (1909-1999), in a memoir called Excursions Into The Past, describes a childhood visit with his mother and younger sister, Helen, to the farm of his grandparents, Alex and Eliza Edwards, probably in the spring of 1914, These excerpts are from Excursions Into The Past. The farm was situated just west of the town of Rockland, and from this form one had a superb view of the Ottawa valley for a distance of perhaps twenty miles to the west and ï¬fteen miles to the east if one stood at the highest point on the farm. This was the top of the escarpment which ran in steps from the bay, the third level being high (200 feet) above the Ottawa River. Here one could view the farms of the Lochaber area to the north The activities of the farm began at an early hour in the morning I can remember being awakened to the sound of cattle lowing in the stable and in the barnyard after milking. There was the occasional bark of Jack (the dog) as he helped return the cattle to pasture There was the sound of the hand pump being used to bring up water from the cistern under the floor. One could hear wood being placed in the fire-box of the kitchen stove. There was the slam of the screen door when someone came in. On entering the kitchen I was aware of the smell of oatmeal porridge cooking. There were miniature explosions as steam broke loose from the porridge leaving a small crater on the surface I recall following my aunt to the cellar where cold water issued from the limestone rock to fill a basin cut ï¬om the stones As I moved about I caught the smell of freshly worked butter. In the woodshed were my grandfatherâs tools. A large wooden block plane, an old saw, a sledge hammer, some rock drills and a giant crow-bar. As a boy, the room over the shed was even more interesting Here was old ï¬lmiture, trunks of clothes, books and old photographs and I know not what else. At the rear of the shed one found milkweed and catnip which 1 dried to take home to my cats There were large butternut trees and back of these, an apple orchard, and along the stone fence which marked the western boundary of the farm, a line of sumac trees. Following this fence southward, one came to the sugar bush and the building containing the equipment for evaporating maple sap into maple syrup When I ï¬rst climbed the hill that lay south of Grandfatherâs barn, I was captivated by the sight of dense woods at the rear of a cleared area, It was to this bush that we were taken to pickMay flowers. To me, these trees appeared to stretch endlessly to the south and I concluded that this could end only in inï¬nity, A playmate with us suggested that one would do well not to proceed too far as there was always the danger that we could come upon the edge of the earth and perhaps fall oven This prospect upset me somewhat but I resolved to press on in the hope that I might discover what the edge of the earth looked like 55 -------------- --------------- 8:5 _. a $3 3: E dosâ~ng 9: E 95% â3325 we 35¢ 2: can pmwm 53833 2 0.5% $8: 2: =0 .53. 2t mmoho< 223 osï¬o c2 2: 2 mm 95203â90 awnâE "EH .2 QBQE mm 555 5:: 452222 2 $525 EEm ENE EEwto 05 mm mumso: .EE 9;. moo: ~23 was: 25 $55 2: AEOEE a 2 6.5 5.30: 2: $8.5 2: 30.6 mgâ: 03% .323 o: .3; 8550.? 3:3 EoEoE ask Amm a» mm .3 6an 3:02 "3:8 355 of Ems: a n.EE Maï¬aâUm v82 :0 EoEmEomu oï¬ an :33 £3 Bonn mEH 003 u >213 $53: $33 2:. 56 -------------- --------------- I left the others picking ï¬owers and soon the woods became less dense and I discovered to my amazement that there was no great [edge from which one could fall into the vast abyss of outer space, Rather, I saw a man behind a one-horse plow, a house and a barn with fields extending into the distance. Not long alter this visit, Loyal Thomson's grandmother, Eliza Roe Edwards died on July 20th, 1914. His grandfather, Alex Edwards followed on May 10th, 1916 at the age of 78 years. Both are buried in the Clarence Cemetery. Their son, Albert, continued to look aï¬er the farm and the dairy until his death in 1932. John Simpson Edwards, born in 1840, was the third son of Souter and Helen. In the 18805, he had his own farm on Lot A, 9th Concession, of Clarence Twp, 8 short distance south of the original Edwards property. He probably purchased it from his brother, Alex, who had owned it previously. John never married. Near the turn of the century, he sold his farm and travelled to Europe, visiting his fatherâs family still living at Rowan Brae, Stotï¬eld, Morayshire, Scotland. On returning to Canada, he lived with his sister, Maggie, and their niece, Katie Edwards. John died in 1920 at 80 years ofage. Margaret/Maggâe Edwards, the only daughter of Souter and Helen, was born in 1843 She lived with her parents until shortly aï¬er the death of her mother in 1883, when she inherited the east quarter of Lot 31 of Clarence Twp. including a house which she and Katie occupied. Her brother, John, lived with them after he returned from Europe, Maggie died in 1903, leaving her house and property to her niece, Katie. Following the death of her uncle, John Simpson Edwards, in 1920, Katie married James G. Sell (1867-1955). Katie died in 1930, age 60 years. Maggie, John and Katie were all buried in Clarence Baptist Cemetery. William Wilkinson Edwards, the fourth son of Souter and Helen, was bom in 1847. Aï¬er his father's death, William, then age 21, took over the family farm. In the Census of 187 1, he appears as head of the household living with his mother, Helen/Ellen, age 57, his sister, Margaret/Maggie, age 27 and his brothers, John, age 30, and George, age 17. The farm on Lot C, Concession 9 consisted of 96 acres; 65 acres of improved or cultivated land and 25 acres of pasture. Six acres are not accounted for but may have been the area where the house and barns stood, The ï¬eld produce for the year 1870, measured in bushels, was 25 ofwheat from 2 1/2 acres, 150 of potatoes from 1 acre, 180 of cats, 25 of peas, 2 of beans, 30 of turnips, 6 of beets or mangels, 20 of carrots and 2 of apples. From 15 acres planted for hay, 15 tons were harvested. Two horses and a ï¬lly, 5 milking cows, 5 other cattle and 4 swine were close in number to the number of animals kept on neighbouring farms of similar size. However, 22 sheep was 4 or 5 times the number of sheep kept by other nearby farmers The 22 sheep produced 61 lbs of wool which was spun and woven into 55 yards of homemade cloth or ï¬annel. While Scottish women and some men were very skillful spinners and weavers, having learned these craï¬s as children, this was a tremendous quantity of cloth for a family of ï¬ve to weave in one year. On March 14th, 1883, William married Mary Jane Henderson, daughter of Edward Henderson and his wife, Elizabeth Sproul/Sproule, of Williamsburg Twp, Dundas County, adjoining Osnabmck Twp. where Mary Jane's sister, Margaret, lived after marrying 57 -------------- --------------- William's cousin, James Lamb McLean. William and Mary Jane lived on the original Edwards farm, Lot C, 9th Concession of Clarence Twp. Several months after their marriage, Williamâs mother, Helen Lamb Edwards, died at the age of 70 years, on July 22nd, 1883. She was buried in the Clarence Cemetery. By 1886, William was farming over 200 acres of land. Then on August 3 lst of that year, he signed his will, as if death was imminent He died the following day, on September lst and was buried in the Clarence Cemetery. At 33 years of age, Mary Jane was leï¬ a widow. She returned to Williamsburg Twp. to live with her family. There were no children. George Edwards, the youngest of Souter and Helen's family, was born in 1853. He apprenticed as a blacksmith as a young man, his family referring to him as a fancy blacksmith. Possibly George worked in the manufacture of ornamental iron, a booming business in the late 19th century, George emigrated to Minneapolis where his cousins, John and Jim Lamb, of Wendover, had settled. There George prospered and married Sadie - . They had one daughter, named Grace. ****t*¥¥¥ William Lamb and Margaret Gordon Family Sometime aï¬er William joined the Baptists, he moved across the river to Clarence Twp. where he farmed on part of Lot 19, Concession 1, 0. S. (Old Survey), a few miles east of Clarence Village, Like most farmers of that time, he also took out and sold square timber. William also purchased the east half of Lot 5,, Concession l, O S. of Clarence Twp, Here he farmed and built a barn, still standing, which carries his initials, WL , on one of the barn beams. Marriage and Family About 1855, William married Margaret Gordon, of St. Andrews, Argenteuil County, CE. Margaret was the fourth daughter of Helen Dewar and John Gordon, who farmed on the Lachute Road near St. Andrews. Margaretâs older brother, Alexander Gordon, married William's younger sister, Ann Lamb, in 1854. Earlier, in 1835, Margaret's cousin, Mary Dewar married William's older brother, John Lamb, (See Dewars of St. F illan, From Glendochart to the Argenteuil Seigniory) Margaret was Mlled Aunt William by some of her nieces and nephews who had another Aunt Margaret, Margaret Lamb McLean. William and Margaret Lamb had six children, all born in Clarence Twp: William Lamb, known as Willie or Will, was born in 1856; then John Alexander Lamb, in 1858, and a daughter Elizabeth Lamb, in [860. Just ï¬ve days aï¬er her third birthday in 1863, Elizabeth died. She was buried in Clarence Cemetery, Two more sons followed, James (Jim) Dewar Lamb born in 1862 and Gordon Lincoln Lamb in 1865. A second daughter, Helen My (Nell) Lamb was born in 1867. Sunday Clockwork William Lamb and his family were active members of the Baptist Church at Clarence, where William was a deacon for many years. In his book, My Old Home Church, Rev, C. C. MeLaurin wrote that William Lamb and his family were so regular in their attendance at church that neighbours along the road between Wendover and Clarence, who had no clocks, could tell the time of day on Sunday by the passing of the Lamb carriage. 58 -------------- --------------- Lambâs Wharf Probably in the early 18605, William purchased Lot 31, Broken Front, in North Plantagenet Twp consisting of 100 acres. This became part of the village of Wendover. In 1866, he added 100 acres of Lot 31, Range 1, adjoining his property on the south. William sold his two farms, one the east half Lot 5, the other, part of Lot 19, both Concession 1, 0.5, of Clarence Twp. in 1868, About this time the family moved to Wendover. On the river front at Wendover, William built a wharf and nearby, a store and post office. Lamb's Wharf was a regular stopping place for the steamers plying the Ottawa River between Bytown and Grenville carrying both passengers, supplies and mail, William was also a building contractor. In 1993, the writer, visiting Clarence Baptist Cemetery, was told by the cemetery caretaker, that there were many barns still in use in the district which were built by William Lamb in the previous century, all marked on the inside with his initials, W.L. The Lamb - McGregor - Ferguson Connection With his contracting business, Lambâs Wharf and Lamb's General Store and Post Ofï¬ce, William needed a staff to look alter the various parts of his enterprise. About 1867, his nephew, John McGregor, came from his farm home at St. Andrews, in Argenteuil County, to work in the store and post oï¬ice. John was about twenty years old, the son of Margaret Lamb's sister, Catharine Gordon, and her husband, John McGregor. It was while working at Wendover, that John met Janet (Jennie) Ferguson. Jennie was the daughter of John Ferguson and Janet McDonald, of Vernon, in Osgoode Twp, Ontario. John Ferguson and William Lamb had attended the same school in Bridge of Allan in Scotland and had continued their friendship in Canada. Although her father was not too pleased, Jennie came to Wendover as governess to the young Lamb children for a year, Alter returning to Vernon, she continued to see John McGregor. Soon they were engaged to marry. In 1869, John decided to emigrate to California where his uncle, Alexander Gordon, had settled. Six years later, Jennie travelled to California where she and John were married in San Francisco in 1876. California seemed a long way from home to the young couple. In the latter part of 1879 or early 1880, John and Jennie McGregor, with their two young daughters took the train east to Minneapolis where three of John's brothers, William, George and Alexander, were living and working as grain brokers, Along with his brothers, John McGregor prospered in the grain business, The Last Years at Wendover. The Census of 1881 of North Plantagenet Twp. shows all ï¬ve Lamb children living at home in Wendover with William and Margaret. William and their sons, Will, age 24, and John, age 22, were listed as merchants in Wendover. Jim, agel8, worked as a clerk, while Gordon, 16, and Nell, 14, were in school. Sometime in the 18805, John and Jim Lamb decided to emigrate to Minneapolis, joining their McGregor cousins, in the grain business. At the time, Minneapolis was a growing enter for the ï¬our milling industry in the American midwest. Together the McGregor and Lamb cousins formed the company of McGregor and Lamb, They built their own elevators, grain warehouses or granaries where grain was sorted and stored until sold to milling companies to process into ï¬our, The McGregor and Lamb elevators stood on old 59 -------------- --------------- Highway #2 in Minneapolis. John Alexander Lamb never married and died in Minneapolis in 1929. James (Jim) Dewar Lamb and his wife, Gertrude, had a son, Will, who died in the ï¬rst World War, and a daughter, Jean, who died in Tucson, Arizona in 1976. About the time that John and Jim Lamb emigrated to Minneapolis, their cousin, George Edwards, the youngest son of Souter Edwards and Helen Lamb, of Clarence Twp, also moved there, Will, Gordon and Nell Alter working in his fatherâs store at Wendover, Will Lamb moved to Ottawa as a young man where he had a boot and shoe store in partnership with Jacob Vincent/Vince Poaps. Vince Poaps had married Will's cousin, Jennie McLean, a daughter of Margaret Lamb and John McLean, of Osnabruck Twp. The Ottawa City Directory of 1893 lists POAPS & LAMB (Jacob V. Poaps, Wm. Lamb) wholesale boots and shoes, at 398-400 Wellington Street. Gordon Lincoln Lamb, was some nine years younger than Will. As a young man, he attended the University of Toronto and was also a student at the Baptist College in Woodstock, Ontario for a time. The youngest of the family, Helen Mary, called Nell, was born in 1867. Neil proved to be very musical and played the pianofone, an instrument which was left to her in later years in her father's will. From Wendover to Ottawa About 1890, William and Margaret, retired to Ottawa where they resided at 155 McLaren Street. In 1893, Will, who was working at POAPS & LAMB, Gordon, 11 student, and Neil were all living at home with their parents. A year later, in March of 1894, William Lamb died. As the custom was at that time, his ï¬merai was held at the family residence. The burial was in Beechwood Cemetery. His obituary in the Ottawa Evening Journal speaks of the man: The cortege which left McLaren Street yesterday for Beechwood, followed the remains of a well-known and respected man, for the last few years a citizen (of Ottawa) but formerly, and for more than half a century, a resident on the banks of the Ottawa at Lambâs Wharf. Mr. Lamb was one of the business men who came upon the scene at a time when the first attempts were made to navigate the Ottawa by steam power. He remembered all the business movements on the river for over sixty years and had a general knowledge of the early history of that period, which made him a most interesting conversationalist. " For a time, Margaret, Will, Gordon and Neil continued to live at 155 McLaren Street, but changes were coming, Gordon and Will Leave Home In 1895, Gordon Lamb married Elizabeth May (Lizzie May) Jackson, of Newmarket, Ontario. Gordon and Lizzie May moved to Riverview Farm on the Ottawa 60 -------------- --------------- River in North Plantagenet Twp, near the village of Treadwell, where Gordon took up farming. Five children were born at Riverview Farm, Arundel in 1898, Eunice in 1901, Toynbee in 1904, and twins, Helen and Ewan, in 1907. Helen lived only about six weeks. She was buried in Georgeâs Lake Cemetery near Treadwell. The family remained on the farm near Treadweli until 1913, About 1896, Will Lamb leï¬ for the Yukon seeking his fortune in the Klondike gold msh, He likely travelled with his cousin, Herk Lamb, of Ottawa, the youngest son of John Lamb and Mary Dewar. On retuming to Ottawa, Will joined the Civil Service, working in the Department of the Interior in the Federal Government. He married Amelia (Bell) Edgar (1858-1925). They had one son, Frank, who emigrated to Pueblo, Colorado. Will died in 1927 in Ottawa. The Blairs In 1902, Nell Lamb married Frederick (Fred) Charles Blair, a civil servant in the Department of Immigration. They made their home at 85 Frank Street, Sometime aï¬er their marriage, Nell's mother, Margaret Gordon Lamb, came to live with them A member of First Baptist Church, Ottawa, Margaret died at the Blair home on April 16th, 1911. in her 84th year. She was buried in Beechwood Cemetery. Nell and Fred were charter members of Calvary Baptist Church and active in various missionary organizations. For twenty years Fred led the service of worship every Sunday evening at the Union Mission in downtown Ottawa while Nell accompanied the singing on the piano. Nell was described a person of sterling qualities and loveable character. She died at the age of 63 in September 1930. There were no children. Fred, then Assistant Deputy Minister of Immigration and Colonization, carried on the services at the Union Mission and continued to live at 85 Frank Street. Many years later, Leone Lamb Robertson recalled her greatâuncle, Fred Blair, coming from Ottawa by train in the 1930s to visit her family, the Toynbee Lambs then living on their farm in Colbome Twp, in southwestem Ontario. Her father, Toynbee, would meet his Uncle Fred at the cherich train station. Their ï¬rst stop was always at the ice cream shop in Goderich where Uncle Fred purchased pint bricks of ice cream of every available ï¬avour and colour. Then the two men hunied out to the farm before the ice cream could melt. No home freezers in those days, Their arrival at the farm was eagerly awaited by the children. Ice cream was a special treat. With such a variety, everyone had a choice to make, then eat it as quickly as possible before it could melt. On these occasions, dessert came before dinner and helped make Uncle Fredâs visits memorable events. Fred Blair died in 1959 at 84 years of age. Both Nell and Fred are buried in Beechwood Cemetery. The Lambs 0fColborne Township, Huron County, Ontario In 1913, Gordon and Lizzie May Lamb and their children, Arundel, Eunice, Toynbee and Ewart, lett Riverview Farm near Treadwell and moved to a farm in Colbome Township, near Goderich, a town on Lake Huron. This part of southwestern Ontario was mostly farm country, many dairy farms The children also had the opportunity of attending high school in Goderich. Two years later, tragedy struck when Ewart, just eight years old, was killed in a 61 -------------- --------------- farm accident. He was buried in Colborne Township Cemetery, near his home, The eldest, Gordon Arundel Lamb, who was known as Arundel, became a machinist working in Weston, Ontario. In 1932, he married Jennie Evelina Wideman (1903- 1983), a professional violinist and violin teacher, They had one son, Allan Gordon Lamb, born in 1934. He married Marie (Claire) Philibcrt in 1938. They had two sons, Gordon Richard Lamb, born in 1959, and Philip Joseph Lamb, born in 1963 Amndel died in 1967 and Jennie in 1983. Eunice May Lamb was born in 1901. As a child, she learned to speak French from other neighbourhood children near Treadwell, Aï¬er high school in Goderieh, Eunice took a secretarial course and then worked for the Sun Life Assurance Company in Montreal where she learned Spanish. Moving to Toronto in 1926 she attended the University of Toronto, graduating with her degree in Modern Languages and Literature in 1930. She taught Spanish at the University of Toronto for three years before going to Chicago for post-graduate work. During the Second World War, Eunice was sent to Lima, Peru, by the Canadian Government. On returning to Canada, Eunice found her parents in failing health and remained in Goderich to care for them. Her mother, Lizzie May, died in 1946 and her father, Gordon Lamb, died in 1950. Both are buried in Colborne Township Cemetery. Eunice returned to the University of Toronto, again teaching Spanish. Later she took up secretarial work in the office of the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Science. In 1977, she retired to live in Colborne Township, near her brother Toynbee and his family. Eunice died in 1986 at 84 years of age and was buried in the cemetery in Colborne Township. Arnold Toynbee Lamb, called by his second name, Toynbee, was the third child bom to Gordon Lamb and Lizzie May Jackson. He was nine years old when the family moved to Colborne Township. In 1927, he married Annie M. Kennedy (1901-1966), a young graduate nurse whose home was in the nearby town of Whitechurch. Toynbee and Annie had six children; Laura Elaine born in 1928; Ruth Leone in 1931, John Arnold in 1932, Donald James in 1933, Helen Doreen in 1934 and Robert Bruce in 1949. About 1930 when Toynbeeâs parents, Gordon and Lizzie May Lamb, retired from farming and moved to Gnden'ch, Toynbee and Annie took over the home farm, giving it the name of Aldemey Farm. A dairy farmer at heart, Toynbee raised purebred Jersey cattle, showing them at various agricultural fairs and winning many prizes. One award, still kept in the family is a silver tea service and tray, suitably engraved. Milk and cream were shipped daily by train and later, by truck, to dairies in Goderich and other centres. In 1954, Toynbee and Annie retired to live in Goderich. Annie died in 1966, following a farm accident and was buried in Colborne Twp. Cemetery. About six years later, in 1972, Toynbee married Violet Wyman, of Hespeler, Ontario, They continued to live in Goderich where Toynbee died in 1988. Toynbee was buried in Colborne Township Cemetery. Nearly a century after Gordon Lamb and his family settled in Colborne Twp., the home farm remains in the Lamb family. Still primarily a dairy farm, it is owned and operated by a grandson, Donald Lamb and his family. ttttakia 62 -------------- --------------- Margaret Lamb and John McLean Famin Margaret Lamb was the sixth child of James Lamb and Elizabeth McFarlane. She came to Canada at eleven years of age. About 1848 she married John McLean who was bom on the Isle of Mull, off the west coast of Scotland, the son of Donald McLean and Janet McCallum. The McLeans had emigrated to Canada in 1829, settling on Lot 19, Range 111 of Lochaber Twp. Both Margaret and John were born in 1820 and probably attended the ï¬rst school on Bay Hill together. The 0snabruck Connection John's older brother, Hector McLean (1816-1897) felt called to the Baptist ministry and attended Montreal Baptist College Then he became the minister of Osnabruck Baptist Church in Osnabruck Twp, Stormont County in eastern Ontario. It would seem that John and an older brother, Neil McLean, visited Hector probably in the 1840s. Finding good farm land for sale, John and Neil McLean purchased adjoining farms, each of 100 acres on Lot 18, Concession VI of Osnabruck Twp. After their marriage, Margaret and John lived on the farm where their eight children were bom' Elizabeth E. McLean in 1849, Donald McLean in 1851, James Lamb McLean in 1853, William McLean in 1855, Janet/Jennie Ann McLean in 1858, George A. McLean in 1860, Florence/Flora McLean in 1862 and John McLean in 1865. All the family were active members of Osnabruck Baptist Church. A Farm Report The 1871 Census provides agricultural information about the farms in Osnabruck Twp, John McLean had 100 acres of which 70 were improved or cultivated, 12 in pasture and one in garden and orchard Eight acres sown to wheat produced 80 bushels; 1 1/2 acres in potatoes, 200 bushels and 12 acres provided 10 tons of hay. Other ï¬eld produce in bushels was, 80 of barley, 200 of oats, 20 of buckwheat, 20 of peas and 2 of beans. Fruit trees yielded 15 bushels of apples and 2 bushels of other ï¬uit, possibly plums or pears. There were 3 horses and 2 colts or ï¬llies; 8 cows and 10 other horned animals; 16 sheep providing 100 lbs. of wool and 3 swine. Two beehives yielded 20 lbs. of honey. From the cowâs milk, 200 lbs, of butter and 40 lbs, of cheese was produced on the farm. Rideauville In a letter written in 1888 to Sarah Baker Lamb of Lochaber Bay, the writer, Mary Jane Edwards, reported that her parents had visited her sister, Margaret/Maggie, and her husband, James Lamb McLean, in Osnabmck Twp. and that James' father, John McLean, was not well and suffering from leg trouble. Within a few years Margaret and John McLean and their family had left the farm in Osnabruck Twp, Two of the boys, Donald and William, had settled in western Canada, John moved to the United States, and James to Ottawa. Margaret and John, their daughter, Flora, son, George, and his family and daughter, Jennie McLean Poaps and her family, all settled in Rideauville, a small village along the south bank of the Rideau Canal between Bank Street and Bronson Avenue. This area later became part of Ottawa South. The family attended McPhail Memorial Baptist Church in Ottawa. John McLean died at his home in Rideauville in 1900. A year later, on August 13th, 1901, Margaret, then 80 years of age, died at the family residence. Both John and Margaret 63 -------------- --------------- were buried in Beechwood Cemetery, Ottawa, The Children of Margaret Lamb And John McLean Elizabeth B. McLean, the eldest of their children, was born in 1849, She manâied Henry Wamer, probably from one of several Warner families living in Osnabruck Twp. They had three sons, William, John Douglas and George. Elizabeth is not named in the obituary of her mother, Margaret, in 1901 and it is assumed that she predeceased her. Donald H, McLean born in 1851, married Emma Alford. They had three sons, John Allan, Bert and Percy Alexander. In 1901, they were living in Moose Jaw, Northwest Territories, later Saskatchewan. James Lamb McLean, named for his maternal grandfather, was born in 1853. In 1876, he married Margaret/Maggie Henderson, (1859-1933) of Williamsburg Twp. which adjoins Osnabruck Twp. They had one son, Sproule McLean, who married Margaret Robb, They seem to have lived on the McLean farm in Osnabruck Twp. until the 18905 when they moved to Ottawa. James died in 1934. Both James and Margaret are buried in Beechwood Cemetery, Ottawa. . William McLean was the third son, born in 1855. He married Alice Edison/Edmondson. They had one daughter, Olive Ethel, who married W, Saddler. The family was living in Winnipeg in 1901, Janet/Jennie Ann McLean, born in 1858, married Vincent/Vince Poaps/Poapst (1854-1922), son of Jacob J. Papst/Poapst and Eliza Jean Stuart, of Osnabruck Twp, in 1877, Vince was a merchant, latterly in partnership with Will Lamb in Ottawa where they owned a shoe and boot store on Wellington Street. Jennie and Vince had six children, all but the sixth child born in Osnabruck Twp. The eldest child, Jennie A. died in early childhood, Two sons followed, Wilford/Wilf Vincent Poaps (1880-1948) and Percival/Percy McLean Poaps (1882-1949). Then two daughters, Jean Ellice born in1884 and Florence/Flora Margaret in 1890. The youngest child, John Douglas Poaps (1898- 1979) was born in Ottawa. Aï¬er Vince died in 1922, Jennie moved to Chatham, Ontario to live with her daughter, Jean Ellice Poaps Jackson. She died there in 1924. Both Jennie and Vince were buried in Beechwood Cemetery, Ottawa, George A. McLean, the sixth in the family, was born in 1859. He man'ied Anm'e Haines (1862-1935). They lived in Rideauville where their three daughters were born; Bertha, Eva Lucy and Jennie B. George died a year aï¬er his mother, in 1902. George, Annie and their daughters are buried in Beechwood Cemetery. Florence/Flora Margaret McLean was born in 1862. Aï¬er her mother's death, she married Wilson Thompson. They lived in Moose Jaw, Northwest Tenitories, later Saskatchewan, John McLean horn in 1865, married Christine Trunneur. They lived in Detroit with their daughter, Marion Margaret, who later married George Wilcox. *âttntar Janet Lamb and Alex McLean Family Janet Lamb, born in 1824 in Scotland, was the seventh child of James Lamb and Elizabeth McFarlane. In 1854, Janet married Alexander/Alex McLean, also born in Scotland in 1824, the son of Donald McLean and Janet McCallum, who settled at Lochaber 64 -------------- --------------- Bay in 1829. The McLean home was on the west side of the Riviére Blanche on Lot 19, Range 111 of Lochaber Twp, where the road (later Highway 148) crossed the Riviere Blanche. This was about a mile east of the Lamb property. Earlier, Alexâs older brother, John McLean had married Janet's older sister, Margaret. Thurso The village of Thurso had its beginning in 1851 when John A. Cameron and his brother, George W. Cameron, built a sawmill on the east side of the Riviere Blanche. Soon mill workers were building homes for their families near the mill. In 1852, a post oï¬ice was established in the growing village and given the name of Thurso. After their marriage, Janet and Alex McLean settled in Thurso where Alex carried on a blacksmith and carriage-making business. Thurso Baptist Church The Baptists living in Lochaber and the growing number living in Thurso were all members of the Clarence Baptist Church. On summer Sunday evenings, ï¬eets of canoes could be seen gliding over the water, the settlers oï¬en singing familiar hymns. In winter, horses and sleighs carried the worshippers rapidly across the ice. As the village of Thurso grew, the Baptists felt the need of a chapel in their own community In 1853, a schoolhouse built at the main crossroads in Thurso, was used for church services on Sundays. A year later, the work of building a chapel on a hillside site on Galipeau Street, was begun. Through the generosity of the Cameron brothers, the chapel was soon completed. By 1856, the Baptists in Thurso and Lochaber wanted to have their own congregation apart from Clarence. A petition signed by twentyâseven members including Alex McLean and Janet Lamb McLean, requested their dismissal from the Clarence Baptist Church to form a separate congregation in Thurso. This change became eï¬âective on February Ist, 1857. At the ï¬rst meeting of the Thurso congregation, Alex McLean was elected a Deacon and Trustee, offices he held for the rest of his life. In 1904, the church building underwent renovations. It was bricked on the outside and the roof was raised several feet. New windows were installed and new pews replaced the old straight-backed seats. In the year 2000, Thurso Baptist Church still stands on its original site on Galipeau Street, a testament to the faith of its pioneers. Janet and Alex McLean âx F amin Alex and Janet McLean had ï¬ve children: Elizabeth Ann McLean born in 1856, married Henry Bymes, Janet Lamb McLean (1858-1928) married Peter Donald McDonald (1857â1899) in 1884; My Helen McLean (1860-1930) married and moved to Buffalo, N Y., Alexander Ernest McLean born in 1863, married Hattie Thorpe and Margaret Flora McLean bom in 1865, married Arthur Bel]. Janet died of lockjaw in 1883 at the age of 59 years. Lockjaw, also known as tetanus, ends in a very painful death. Alex died in Thurso in 1906, age 82 years. Both are buried in the Papineauville Cemetery. **t*tta 65 -------------- --------------- Baptist Churches on the Lower Ottawa, Thurso Baptist Church, Thurso, Quebec, built 1854, aï¬er 1904 renovations, where the James Lamb and Alex McLean families were members Clarence Baptist Church, Clarence, Ontario, organized in 1825, where the John S. Edwards and William Lamb families were members. 66 -------------- --------------- James Lamb and Sarah Baker Family James, born in Scotland in 1828, came to Lochaber with his family when he was almost three years old. He attended the local school on Bay Hill, then worked with his father on the land. Aï¬er his older sister, Margaret, married John McLean about 1848 and moved to Osnabruck Twp. in Stonnont Co. where John and his brother, Neil, had farms, James visited them a number of times. Crossing the Ottawa River, he walked through the sparsely settled forest following the roads or blazed trails, at times barefoot carrying his shoes. On some trips he was accompanied by friends from Lochaber, Wes McEachem or Neil McLean. It was on one of these visits that James met Sarah Ann Baker, a member of Osnabruck Baptist Church and daughter of James Baker and Margaret Gallingher who farmed in Osnabruck Twp. The exact date of their wedding is somewhat uncertain. James' Bible gives the date of June 26th, 1855 at Osnabruck However, a century later a hand- written note signed by a Rev, Hamilton, was found among some old letters in the house at Lochaber, saying, On June 14th, 1854, I married James Lamb, Yeoman, and Sarah Ann Baker, Spinster, at Omabrook. All their lives James and Sarah celebrated their marriage in 1855 Home on Bay Hill Following their wedding, James and Sarah returned to the log house on Bay Hill, rebuilt alter the ï¬re in 183 8,. Their ï¬rst child, a daughter, Margaret/Maggie Baker Lamb, was born in 1856, followed by two sons, James Edgar/Eddie Lamb in 1858 and m Dewar Lamb in 1860. The Baptist congregation in nearby Thurso had separated from Clarence Baptist Church, across the river in 1857, but neither James nor Sarah, both Baptists, were listed among the Constituent Members of the new Thurso Baptist Church, The Farm Census of 1861 James Lamb's farm at Lochaber consisted of 200 acres on Lot 22, Range 11 and Lot 22, Range 111 in Lochaber Twp. of which 65 acres were under cultivation; 35 acres in crops and 30 acres in pasture. The remaining 135 acres was in bush, In 1860, the crop produce was, in bushels, 63 in spring wheat, 60 in peas, 300 in oats, 100 in potatoes and 16 tons of hay. The livestock consisted of 5 milk cows, yielding 250 lbs. of butter and 50 lbs. of cheese, and 3 heifers, 3 horses and l ï¬lly, 6 sheep providing 25 lbs. of wool which was woven into 36 yards of ï¬annel, and 3 pigs. Four hundred lbs. of beef and 400 lbs. of pork were also produced during the year The production of the Lamb farm was comparable to neighbouring farms in the area. Bytown Becomes Ottawa Upstream, the village of Bytown had been growing in size. On January lst, 1855, it was incorporated as the City of Ottawa. Meanwhile the Parliament of the United Canadas, that is Upper and Lower Canada, could not agree on the site of a permanent capital. In early 67 -------------- --------------- 1857, it was decided to ask Queen Victoria to choose between the two cities. On December 31st, 1857, Queen Victoria conveyed to the Parliament her choice of Ottawa as the permanent capital of the United Canadas, then meeting in Quebec City. Possibly she was guided by the words of the Govemor, Sir Edmund Head, "Ottawa, in fact, is neither in Upper or Lower Canada. Literally it is in the former but a bridge alone separates it from the latter." Soon architects and engineers were designing the new Parliament Buildings to be built on the bluff on the west side of Entrance Bay, known as Barracks Hill, 150 feet above the Ottawa River. Excavation for the foundations began in the fall of 1859. A Princer Procession In August of 1860, the Price of Wales, later Edward VII, came to Canada to lay the cornerstone of the new Parliament Buildings. As he traveled up the Ottawa River by steamer, he was met and escorted along the way by hundreds of small boats and canoes paddled by local people and lumbermen from up and down the Ottawa, It must have been an exciting occasion for the residents of the Lower Ottawa as they watched the parade of boats pass by. The next day, September lst, 1860, the Prince of Wales ofï¬cially laid the cornerstone of the Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. Moving the Government It was another ï¬ve years before the government in Quebec City could ï¬nally move to Ottawa. In his book, Lochaber Boy: My Well Loved Country Home, Angus MacLachlan, describes the move of the government oï¬ices from Quebec City to Ottawa by way of the Ottawa River: In September 1865 the buildings, though not ï¬nished, were ï¬t to be occupied and Parliament, then at Quebec City, was so notiï¬ed The Parliament came to an end the 18th of September, Craig and Valliére, of Quebec City, won the contract for moving the furniture, etc, of the government. The amount of the contract was $15,800. The contractors used steamers and barges, the first away September 29th, Others followed and all was up the Ottawa before the end of November. The packing ï¬nished, the government employees began to pack up their furniture and eï¬ects for their own moves For the married it was an era of large families, so this was not a light task, Not all moved, as a few stayed in Quebec City. About 350 public servants made Ottawa their new home, With dependents about 1500 new citizens gave quite a boost to Ottawa âs population of 15, 0001 Some came by way of the Ottawa River: others by railway by way of Point Levis, Montreal, Prescott, and to the Depot near Sussex Street, Ottawa. It was indeed a rare thing to see the furniture and ï¬xtures of your government passing by your very door, including also the books of the 68 -------------- --------------- Parliamentary Library in a thousand or more cases, All this was accomplished In a little under two months While the government oï¬ices were occupied in 1865, it was not until June of 1866 that the Parliament of the United Canadas met in Ottawa. A Growing Family In 1862,a third son was born to James and Sarah, Peter Osborne Lamb, then four daughters, Elizabeth Ann Lamb in 1864 and Helen/Ella Edwards Lamb in 1867, born a few days before Confederation. Lug Janet Lamb was born in 1872 and the youngest of the family, Frances Dorothy/Dora/Dolly Lamb in 1878. Summer Concerns The summer of 1870 was not without its concerns for the families living along the north shore of the Ottawa River. A column in the Ottawa Citizen on September 27, 1924, called Old Time Stuï¬: refers to the great bush ï¬res of the summer of 1870 which swept through the district around Ottawa and Hull and the north bank of the Ottawa most of the way to Montreal. For weeks the air was heavy with smoke as the bush ï¬res spread, breaking out here and there, then subsiding. No one knew where the ï¬re might break out next. September rains ï¬nally ended the threat of ï¬re Fire in the Night In Lochaber Bay, My Well Loved Country Home, Angus MacLachlan records an event told by Florence McDermid Skinner about the home of her grandfather, Rev. Archibald Campbell, who lived in the original log house on Bay Hill built by his father, Neil Campbell, in 1828. Florence Skinner wrote: By 1875, Archibald and his wife had six children and on a cold night just before Christmas, the big log house built by his father (Neil Campbell) caught ï¬re and burned to the ground, Mrs. Campbell and the children had to escape in their night clothes and Archibald had to see his library of valuable books and all the family records go up in ï¬ames. Their good neighbour, James lamb, came with his team of horses and sleigh, covered with blankets and quilts, to take them to another shelter This story indicates that James Lamb and his family were still living in the log house built in 183 8, near the Campbell home in 1875. The Age of the Railway The ï¬rst train to travel from Montreal to Ottawa by way of the north shore of the Ottawa River, passed through Lochaber in 1880. The railway closely followed the earlier road along Bay Hill crossing both the Lamb and Campbell farms. The Lochaber station was built on the Campbell land close to the road. For many years there were two passenger trains each day to Ottawa and two to 69 -------------- --------------- Montreal, morning and evening to serve the Lochaber people. The passenger trains included a baggage car for mail, light parcels and perishable goods. A Home an the Ridge Everyone liked the services the trains brought to the community, but some farmers whose lands the tracks crossed on Bay Hill, found the trains noisy and the tracks inconvenient to their farm operations. About this time two new roads were opened; one north from the highway between Lots 21 and 22, the other west from Riviere Blanche to the township boundary,.between Range II and Range III. By 1890, James and Sarah had built a two story house and nearby barn on the ridge at the north end of their farm on Range II close to the new township road. Situated about ï¬fty feet above Bay Hill, the hem of the house provided a panoramic View of the Ottawa valley and the gentle hills of eastern Ontario beyond. A century later, the house and barn still stand, although the barn is showing its age. Shadows and Sunshine, 1883-1893 The ï¬rst shadows to cross the family of James and Sarah silently approached in the spring of 1883. In late winter their second daughter, Elizabeth, then 18 years old, contracted tetanus, often called lockjaw. Bacteria commonly found in the soil enter the body through cuts in the skin and produce a neurotoxin. In a short time the neurotoxin causes extreme muscular spasms ending in a painful death. Elizabeth died a few weeks later on April 12th and was buried in the Lochaber Cemetery near her home. About four months later, on July 22nd, James' sister, Helen Lamb Edwards, died at her home across the river in Clarence Twp. She was 70 years old and was buried in the Clarence Cemetery. The cause of her death is not known, Not quite a month later, on August 18th, Janet Lamb McLean, the sister closest in age to James, also contracted tetanus and died at her home in Thurso in her 60th year. She was buried in the Papineauville Cemetery. In l884, the neurotoxin causing tetanus was isolated leading to the development of an antitoxin which prevents the muscular spasms of tetanus. This antitoxin is still in use today. The Campbell: The next year brought a wedding in the family when Margaret/Maggie Lamb, the eldest daughter of James and Sarah, married Hugh Campbell, a widower, on August 81h, 1885. Their ï¬rst child, James/Jamesie/Jimmy/Jim Campbell was born on February 18th, 1887. It was a very difficult birth, the baby suffering severe birth injuries which leï¬ him with lifelong speech and coordination difficulties. Nineteen months later, a second son, Percival/Percy Campbell, was born on October 10th, 1888. Again it was a difï¬cult birth. The baby, Percy, survived. His mother, Maggie, age 32 years, died shortly aï¬er giving birth. She was buried in the Lochaber Cemetery. Maggie's husband, Hugh Campbell, moved away leaving Jimmy, then 20 months old and Percy, a few weeks of age, with their grandparents, James and Sarah. 70 -------------- --------------- A Farm Accident A few weeks before Maggie's death, her younger brother, John Dewar Lamb, married Annie McLeod McFarlane, on September 25th 1888. A daughter, Elizabeth Pearl/Lizzie Pearl Lamb, was born on December 30th, 1889. At the time, John Lamb, then 30 years of age, was postmaster of the Lochaber Bay Post Ofï¬ce, Although varying details are given by different descendants, it was a day in 1890 that John was working across the river near Rockland, when he fell or was thrown from a grain or hay wagon. He died immediately leaving a young widow and baby daughter, He, too, was buried in the Lochaber Cemetery, An Accident at the Mill James Edgar Lamb, usually called Eddie, was the eldest son of James and Sarah. About 1892, he married Lucy Ferguson. Shortly aï¬er, when he was working at the pulp mill in Buckingham, a pulp grinder exploded. Eddie, then 34 years old, was killed instantly, leaving Lucy a young widow. He was buried in the Lochaber Cemetery. Some months following the accident, Lucy gave birth to a daughter, Ethel Janet Lamb. Ethel married Earl Munson, ofMassena, New York. They had one daughter, Louella. A Shudaw at Gull Lake As a young man, Peter Lamb, the fourth child of James and Sarah, worked for the WC. Edwards Lumber Company which sent him into their timber limits in Mulgrave Twp, just north of Lochaber Twp. It was there that he met Lena Mielke, the daughter of Carl Mielke and Carolin Berwald who farmed at Gull Lake. Peter and Lena were married at Thurso on June 18th,1889. They returned to Gull Lake where they lived on the Mielke farm, A son, John Gilbert Lamb, was born in February, 1891, Nineteen months later, in September 1892, John took sick and died almost immediately. He was buried at Gull Lake, Two daughters were born later at Gull Lake, Mary Carlena in 1893 and Lucy Janet in l 897. About 1900, Peter, Lena and their two daughters moved to Buckingham where Peter was employed by the James McLaren Pulp Mills Two more daughters were born in Buckingham, Ruby Ruth in 1900 and Helen Alexandra in 1902. The proximity of Buckingham to the Lamb farm at Lochaber meant the Peter Lamb family could visit their grandparents, aunts and cousins frequently, especially in the summer when Peter was home from the woods. Dawn For James and Sarah, now in their ï¬ï¬ies, the pain of losing four of their eight children and one grandchild, suddenly and tragically, may have been somewhat eased by the needs of their four young grandchildren, Lizzie Pearl Lamb and Ethel Lamb, in the care of young widowed mothers, and Jimmy and Percy Campbell, leï¬ in their care at the farm. Ella, 26 years of age, was working as a secretary in Ottawa. Lucy, age 21, preparing to be married, was at home with Dorothy, 15 years old. 71 -------------- --------------- The Portmisrresr Lucy Janet Lamb the seventh child of James and Sarah, married Robert Scott of Shawbridge, Quebec, in 1894. They lived in Shawbridge where the Scott family were merchants in the town. Later that year a son, Harold Robinson Scott, was born. In 1895, Robert Scott died suddenly and Lucy, at twenty-three years of age, was leï¬ a widow with a baby son. Shortly aï¬er, James wrote to Lucy saying that Lochaber Bay Post Ofï¬ce needed a postmistress. If she wished to train for the position, she could have part of the house for the post ofï¬ce and the family would care for baby, Harold. Lucy came home to look after the post oï¬ice, a position she held for many years. Her nephew, Jimmy Campbell, now a teenager, also had a job. Each day he went down the hill and across the creek to the train station to bring back the mail for the Post Ofï¬ce in the Lamb house on the ridge, The Peels of Lindsay Helen/Ellen/Ella Edwards Lamb was the third daughter of James and Sarah. Ella, as a young woman, taught school at Thurso by special licence, Then, in the18905 she became secretary to Mr. Garland, of John M. Garland & Son of Ottawa, 3 position she held for seven years. In the fall of 1899, Ella married James Albert/Bert Peel (1874»1955) of Lindsay, Ontario, where Bert owned a lumber mill. A farming and lumbering center on the Scugog River, Lindsay was located some twenty-seven miles west of Peterborough in central Ontario. Ella and Bert had ï¬ve children. Anna Isabel, born in 1902, married T. Watson Kirkconnel aï¬er graduating from McMaster University in 1924. In the summer of 1925, she returned to Lindsay to give birth to twins. Isabel died immediately following the birth. The boys, Jim and Tom, were brought up in the Peel family in Lindsay. Three sons followed' Walter born in 1905, Stewart in 1908 and Morgan in 1911. A daughter, Marion, born in 1914, later graduated in nursing and married a school teacher, Bob McKinley. The Peel family were faithï¬rl members of Cambridge St. Baptist Church in Lindsay, where Bert was a deacon for almost 40 years. Over the years there was much visiting back and forth between the Peels of Lindsay and the Lambs of Lochaber. Ella died in 1952 in Lindsay, Bert in 1955. Both are buried in Riverside Cemetery, Lindsay. A Golden Wedding Anniversary On Tuesday, June 27th, 1905, family, relatives and friends gathered at the Lamb farm on Lochaber Bay to join James and Sarah in celebration of their 50th wedding anniversary. Following aï¬emoon tea, a number of brief addresses were given recalling events of the past and hopes for the ï¬xture. The local newspaper, The Buckingham Post, reported that James and Sarah were among the oldest residents of the township of Lochaber, calling them peaceable and upright citizens who had experienced their sunshine and shadows. The item concluded: Mr. and Mrs. Lamb have held the esteem of the community continuously. They have been consistent and honoured members of Thurso 72 -------------- --------------- Baptist Church, All trust they may yet see many happy years together. The Politician Harold Scott grew up on the Lamb farm with his cousins, Jimmy and Percy Campbell, both a few years older. Harold and Percy attended the Lochaber Protestant School. About 1907, when Harold was ready for high school, he moved to Lindsay, Ontario, to live with his uncle and aunt, Bert and Ella Lamb Peel. He graduated from Lindsay Collegiate Institute and later from the Faculty of Education in Toronto. As a young man, Harold worked in the lumber industry, ï¬rst in the woods and later in retail lumber, eventually owning the Scott Lumber Company in Peterborough, In 1943, Harold sold his business and entered politics, He was elected to the Ontario Legislature that year as the Conservative member for Peterborough, From 1946 to 1952, Harold was Minister of Lands and Forests for the Province of Ontario. He held his seat until 1959 when he retired for health reasons Two years later he died and was buried in Riverside Cemetery in Lindsay. He was survived by his wife, Lucy Ellen/Nellie Gray, whom he married in 1919, There were no children. Struck down About the time that Harold leï¬ for Lindsay, in 1907, his grandmother, Sarah, who for over titty years had looked after everyone else in the family, suffered a severe stroke that leï¬ her paralysed and conï¬ned to her room. She was cared for by her daughters, Lucy and Dorothy. Percy, now nearly twenty years old and Jimmy, a year older, worked with their grandfather on the farm. A Memorable Reunion In Lochaber Bay, My Well Loved Country Home, Angus MacLachlan describes a gathering held at Lochaber Bay amid a grove of trees on the McEachern farm, on September 13th, 1912. Called the Old Boys Reunion, it brought together several hundred descendants of the early Scottish settlers from near and far. The program included speeches, highland dancing, recitations of Robbie Bums' poems, the singing of Scottish songs, music played on the bagpipes by Pipe-Major MacDonald, games, time to visit with old friends and neighbours and plenty of good food from local kitchens served in the nearby schoolhouse. The Mayor of Lochaber, R.N. MacLachlan, opened his address of welcome with these words: While we rejoice with you on the progress you have made, we look back with greater pride to the time nearly a century ago, that marks the landing of the ï¬rst settlers in this place from their beloved Scotland. A photograph was taken of ten Lochaber men, all early settlers, whose ages added up to 750 years. One of these was James Lamb, then 84 years of age. The gathering ended as everyone joined hands and sang Auld Lang Syne, then slowly leï¬ the grove to the strains of Lochaber's Lament played by Pipe-Major MacDonald. 73 -------------- --------------- All agreed that this had been a truly memorable reunion. Faithful Servants April 1914 brought to a close the lives of two devout members of Thurso Baptist Church, James Lamb and his wife, Sarah Ann Baker. They had been married almost 60 years. Sarah, paralysed by a stroke seven years earlier, had been conï¬ned to her room by limited movement and difficulty in speaking, afï¬ictions she bore with great patience. She was in her 79th year when she died on April 9th. James had come to Canada with his family in 1831 as a child of three. He had lived on the farm at Lochaber for 83 of his 86 years. In frail health for several years, James passed away on April 26th. Both Sarah and James were buried in the Lochaber Cemetery. The Next Generation Jamesâ Last Will and Testament, with bequests to other family members, left the farm at Lochaber Bay to his daughters, Lucy and Dorothy, and his grandson, Percy Campbell It was also to be a lifelong home for his grandson, Jimmy, disabled from birth. Percy is remembered for his fondness for animals, particularly his horses. Marion Peel McKinley, in a letter written in 1999, recalled that Percy was noted for his lovely horses and how he won ï¬rst prize at the Montebello Horse Show. Marion and her aunt, Dorothy Lamb, made little yarn balls to decorate the brass harness that Percy had rented for the Show. She also said that Percy took great care of Jimmy. In later years Lucy Lamb Scott married John S. Hews, of Thurso, a widower with several adult sons. Their home was on the east side of Galipeau Street opposite the Baptist Church. John died in 1951. Early Lochaber Bay In the fall of 1931, a group of Lochaber Bay women, including Dorothy Lamb, met and decided to form the Lochaber Bay Women's Institute, affiliated with the Quebec Women's Institute, a farm organization for women. The local women took tums presenting the program at their meetings. About 193 5, Dorothy Lamb was asked to prepare a paper on the early days of Lochaber Bay and the families who were among the early settlers, Two years later she read her paper, called Early Lochaber Bay, at a meeting of the Institute. It was well received. That fall it was published in the Buckingham Post in the September 10th, 1937 issue of the newspaper. Another Tragic Accident In 1940, Peter Lamb and his wife, Lena, were living in Buckingham. Peter had retired some years earlier and often spent the day visiting the farm at Lochaber where he was born in 1862 On Thursday morning, August 8th, 1940, unknown to others on the farm, he decided to take the four year old bull from the barn down to the creek for water. Shortly after, his nephew, Percy, found him near the creek fatally injured, the docile bull nearby. The funeral was held in Buckingham Baptist Church on Sunday afternoon, August 11th, 1940. Peter was buried in the Lochaber Cemetery. Later a memorial window was presented to 74 -------------- --------------- Buckingham Baptist Church with the inscription, âTo the glory of God and in loving memory of Peter Lamb, died August 8, 1940, donated by his wife and family.â Lena continued to live in their Buckingham home until 1956 when she moved to Ottawa to live with her daughter, Ruby Lamb Clarkson. Over the years, Lena had been an active member of the Baptist Church, the Women's Missionary Society and the Red Cross. Her nimble ï¬ngers knit hundreds of items, not only for her family, but for agencies such as the Red Cross, especially during the two World Wars. Lena died in Ottawa on January 12, 1957 and was interred in the Lochaber Cemetery. A Wedding at Waterde Perhaps it was through Lucy Lamb Hews, Percy's aunt, or through Thurso Baptist Church, that Percy met Ethel Campbell, a widow living on Galipeau Street in Thurso. They were married on Saturday, June 14th, 1947 in Waterdown, Ontario, where Ethelâs sister lived, Aï¬er the wedding they returned to live on the farm at Lochaber. The Lamb Look Frances Dorothy Lamb, known as Dorothy, Dora or Dolly, was bom at Lochaber on January 8th, 1878, the fifth daughter and youngest child of James and Sarah. She was ï¬ve years old when her older sister, Elizabeth, died at home of lockjaw in 1883, and ten years old when her sister, Maggie, died at home following childbirth in 1888. Dorothy's nephews, Jimmy and Percy Campbell, who lived in the Lamb home were more like younger brothers. Later, with Lucy, she looked aï¬er her invalid mother for seven years. There was always someone needing her care Dorothy had the Lamb look - pink skin, twinkling blue eyes, fair hair and a gracious manner. She had a strong resemblance to her cousin, William Alexander Lamb, of Ottawa, a son of John Lamb and Mary Dewar. Story-telling seemed to come easily to Dorothy. She had a great sense of Lamb family history and often spoke of earlier years in the family and community. Later she wrote about these times and people in Early Lochaber Bay. Dorothy was delighted when the Buckingham Post published her paper in 1937. On April 26th,1948, Dorothy died suddenly at her home on the Lamb farm, at 70 years of age. She was buried in the Lochaber Cemetery with her family. Changes at Lochaber and Lindsay Quickly and quietly, three members of the Lamb connection passed away in 1952. The ï¬rst was Jimmy Campbell, who died on April 20th at Lochaber. Neighbours joined relatives from Buckingham, Thurso, Osgoode and Ottawa for the funeral, Harold Scott, Bert Peel and his son, Stewart, came from Lindsay. In spite of, or perhaps because of Jimmy's disabilities, he was well respected and loved in his family and community. He was buried in the family plot at Lochaber. In the fall, Ella Lamb Peel died at Lindsay on October 5th. She was buried in Riverside Cemetery. A month later, on November 10th, Percy's wife, Ethel Campbell, also passed away and was buried in Beechwood Cemetery, Ottawa. Towards the end of 1952, Lucy Lamb Hews, widowed in 1951, and her brother-in-law, Bert Peel, then a widower, were married. Bert died in 1955 and was buried in Riverside Cemetery, Lindsay, Lucy died 75 -------------- --------------- on August lOth of the same year. Her funeral was held in Thurso Baptist Church. Interment followed in Papineauville Cemetery. Farewell to Loehaber The last of the Lamb family to live on the farm at Lochaber, Percy Campbell began to make plans for the future. There were still some of his Peel cousins living in Lindsay and he decided to move there. In 1955, he sold the farm. On March 19th, about ï¬fty friends and neighbours gathered to say, an revoir to Percy, He was remembered for his interest in all community activities and for his friendly personality and keen Scottish wit. With words of appreciation for the past and best wishes for the future, Percy was presented with a wallet and gilt of money. After 124 years, the Lamb farm, ï¬rst settled in 1831 by James Lamb, his wife, Elizabeth McFarlane and their children, had been passed on to others. After Loehaber Not long after Percy took up residence in Lindsay, Ontario, he met Dora Hall Thomas, a widow. They manied on January 19th, 1957 and lived in Sunderland, a town about 20 miles west of Lindsay for 15 years, Percy died there on August lst, 1972 at 84 years of age, He was buried near Sunderland. drivirtkirkir John Lamb and Mary Dewar Family Aï¬er his father, James Lamb, leï¬ New Edinburgh for Clarence Twp. in June of 1831, John Lamb began working at the grist and ï¬our mill in the process of being built by Thomas McKay on his property at Rideau Falls. In Bytown 1834 to Ottawa 1854, George R. Blyth describes the McKay mill in these words: The McKayâs large ï¬our mill at New Edinburgh was built in 1832, and was at that time the most extensive in Canada, being ï¬tted up with the most modern machinery. Ihey manufactured for the British and home market, giving employment to overï¬fty handy in the mill and c00perage,, as all ï¬our was then sold in barrels or halfâbarrels. Planning and installing new mill machinery was any millwrightâs dream. For twentyâ one year old John, this was a rare opportunity. The Precentor Three years earlier, in 1828, when his stonemasons had a slack period in the building of the Rideau Canal, Thomas McKay, at his own expense, had his men build a small stone church in Bytown, at the corner of Wellington and Kent Streets. Later known as St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, it stands on the same corner today. On learning that his new millwright, John Lamb, was well acquainted with church music, Thomas McKay arranged to have John installed as precentor at the new Presbyterian 76 -------------- --------------- church. John's task, sometimes called âraising the tune,â was to strike his tuning fork to begin the singing of the psalms from the Scottish Psalter in slow time to such well-known tunes as Dunfermline, Old 100th or Dundee. Thomas McKay's grist mill in New Edinburgh was ï¬nished in the summer of 1833 and on August 26th, opened for business, Hamilton Mills - Hawkesbmy Mills In late 1833, when his work was ï¬nished at New Edinburgh, John Lamb moved down the Ottawa River to Hamilton Mills, known locally as the Snye or Hawkesbury Mills, which included the village of Hawkesbury, at the head of the Long Sault Rapids. 0n islands near the shore, the Hamiltons had built sawmills which the Hamilton family had owned and operated since 1807. The mills were situated between the two largest islands, Hamilton Island and Ile du Chenail, where the water ran swiï¬ and deep providing power for the mill machinery. This channel, in French, Chenail Ecarteâ, meaning lost channel, provided the local name, the Snye. It was a community of mills and houses for employees, a village of its own, extending over several islands, the channels between ï¬lled in with slabs of wood and covered with eanâh. Lumber for the mills was cut during the winter months on the company's timber limits on the upper reaches of rivers ï¬owing into the Ottawa River. The cut logs were placed beside the river which would carry them down to the Ottawa with the spring melt. On reaching the Ottawa, the logs were surrounded by log booms, towed downstream and anchored above the mills until needed, Some years ago, in an address to the Women's Club of Hawkesbury, called The Hamilton Era And Beyond, Maria Higginson (1871-1961) and her cousin, Agnes Higginson Brock (1879-1978), described the scene from the bridge over the channel between Hamilton Island and Ile du Chenail: From the bridges we watched the men with their pike poles sorting out the logs for the conveyor to carry them up, one after another to the saw, The men seemed to walk on the water, as they hurried along on the slippery boom of square timber chained together to turrets of rock piles, to prevent them from getting loose and ï¬oating away under the bridges. 0n the right we watch the men unloading boards, and board by board passing them up to the man at the top of the lumber pile. We enter the Mills to gaze and gaze at the saws, band saws and cir- culars saws, and listen to their music as they do their work, powered by the rushing water in ï¬umes below. We enjoy the pungent smell of the newly cut pine, and all the neat limewashed buildings so white and clean. There were five mills, each with its gang saws, Circular saws, and then a band saw. The whole Snye was network of tracks for the cars to take the lumber to the piling grounds. These cars were drawn by horses. The horses knew, as well as the drivers, that when the bell rang at twelve and at six, It meant "stop work! â The horses were separated from the cars, and horses rmd boys ran for the stables. 77 -------------- --------------- LOWER CANADA Leï¬ - The Ottawa River at Hawkesbury, c 1840, Below-Hawkesbury & Islands 0. 1840. UPPER CANADA / UPPER CANADA -------------- --------------- Millions of feet of lumber were cut every season - 70, 000 per day. Some of this lumber was sold locally, but most of it was loaded onto barges, principally for the American market. Big square timber was made into cribs and ï¬oated to Quebec City for the British market. It was much used in shipbuilding. It was here in the Hamilton mills that John Lamb would be employed as a millwright for the next twenty years, responsible with others for the efï¬cient mechanical operation of the mill machinery, The Congregationalism When John arrived at Hamilton Mills, there already were Congregationalists meeting each Sunday for worship in the adjoining village of Hawkesbury. Rev. William McKillican, a Congregational minister liom Scotland, had settled on a farm at Breadalbane in Lochiel Twp, Glengarry County, about twelve miles south of Hawkesbury. Each Sunday he rose at 4 am. to walk to Hawkesbury, then on to one or two other communities to conduct Sunday worship, returning home late in the evening. The Congregationalists at Hawkesbury met in a log school built by the Hamiltons, sometimes referred to as Hawkesbury Hall, It was situated on John Street near the bridge across to the Snye. Later this site was sold to the Presbyterians, who built a church which still stands today. Soon John was leading the music, striking his tuning fork to start the singing in his clear baritone voice The Congregationalists preferred much livelier hymns than the Presbyterians. It was not long before Mr. McKillican invited John to come with him and lead the music at his other services. The congregation at St. Andrews, in Argenteuil County across the river did not yet have a church but met in each others homes. Among this group was the Duncan Dewar family including their twenty-two year old daughter, Mary, The Dewars of Carillon Hill Duncan Dewar, his wife, Catherine Black, and their eldest son, Peter, came to Canada from Scotland in 1804 with Duncan's older brother, Peter, his wife, Christian Stewart, and their family of nine. Duncan and Peter settled on nearby farms on Carillon Hill, a ridge separating the North River and the Ottawa River. Carillon Hill was a part of the Argenteuil Seigniory. Duncan and Peter Dewar were sons of a Scottish Baron and his wife, Duncan Deor/Dewar and Janet McIver, of Glendochart, near the village of Killin in Perthshire. Their father, the Baron, had lost his title and his property in the aï¬ermath of the Jacobite Rebellion of 1745. Both the Duncan and Peter Dewar families would have known the Rev. William McKillican in Scotland when he had been the Congregational minister in the village of Killin in Glendochart before emigrating to Canada in 1816, Dimcan Dewar and his family were staunch Congregationalism, although his brother, Peter and his family were Presbyterians Duncan and Catherine Dewar had seven children born at their home on Carillon Hill, near St. Andrews, including their daughter, Mary, in 18 l 1 . 79 -------------- --------------- [#WW, _ ,mï¬y. ,,,, ,__ w, A new and lawful ([(Ixrri/M/un (If iW/lrârâï¬âï¬ï¬â]. LE'ITERS PATENT to John Lamb, Township 01' Hnwkcsbury, Mill- wright, for the Invention of âA NEW in) warm. DESCRIPTION n; âVATER-WIIEEL.â Kingston, daml Ih'il October. IRLZ. mum )Iriw'IJRIIâTION. The mid whorl is pi'OIMâilCLl hy the water being forced through oblique orifice: phu-ml lâIIIHIIl it~ vircumi'm'cnce, and having one portion 77 of each Ilnnt lmmllvl with [he ~hnl'r um which the wheel revolves, and the ofhn'r iINâliDlâd :i il'Nl tln- direction of the water as it passes through the said nri . 'I'lu- \mh-r thus acting, ï¬rst upon the par- allel portion 01' UN hunt. and nl'tvrunnls upon the inclined part as it leaw-s IIII' \i-hm-l, âl'hv uhu-nl hm A'ii'L-ulï¬r gates round the oriï¬ces for admitting the untor :It ph-ueux-m and is enclosed in a. cistern having ï¬oud g:utx-<,:nnl whun it i< in inulium the whole head of water is raised in tho cimn-n for H!» purpuw uf pn-ssiug tho Water through the said oriï¬ces, and thv \\ IIL'KâLIHIIIXIâ i» mpuhlo of lining made frost proof, as it is not nli'cctvd hy iii-in: innin-reml cntiroly in the Water, JOHX LABIB. The Cover fOlâ LETTERS PATENT issued to John Lamb for a New Waterwheel. 80 -------------- --------------- A Wedding at St. Andrews, Argenteuil County, CE. Within two years of meeting, John and Mary were married at St. Andrews. The entry in the records of St. Andrews Presbyterian Church reads: John Lamb, bachelor, of Hawkesbury, Upper Canada, millwright, and Mary Dewar, of St. Andrews. spinster, were married after the publication of barms on the ï¬fth day of November in the year of our Lord One thousand eight hundred and thirty-ï¬ve in the presence of these witnesses, by me Duncan Dewar Arch â41 Henderson ES T readwell John Lamb Mary Dewar Children and Churches John and Mary had seven children, all born at their home on Main Street in Hawkesbury Mills. Their ï¬rst child, a daughter, Elizabeth Jane Lamb, was born August 24th, 1836, and two years later, a second daughter, Catherine/Kate on November 18th, 1838. Both were baptized as infants by Rev. William McKillican. In 1841, Rev. James T. Byme, a Congregational minister brought to Canada by the London Missionary Society, arrived at L'Orignal to work with the Congregationalists in L'Orignal and Hawkesbury. He baptized both of John and Mary's older sons in the Congregational Chapel in LâOrignal; Jameslï¬m Bme Lamb, named aï¬er the minister, was born July 2nd, 1841 and William/Willie Alexander Lamb, born September 17th, 1843. About this time, plans were being made to build a Congregational Chapel in the village of Hawkesbury, 6 miles east of L'Orignal. An entry in the Land Registry oï¬ice at LâOrignal, Vol. X, dated April 6, 1844, describes a lot in Hawkesbury as, âVillage Lot #4, south side of great High Way, at Church Street to the bank of Mill Creek," sold by Hon. Peter McGill to the trustees of "A religious Congregation or Society of Congregationalistsâ for a Chapel and burying ground. The trustees were John Lamb, G. Hutchinson, Thos, White, Alexander Anderson and Zephaniah Swiï¬ Moon Hersey. The price was £20. Two writers brieï¬y describe the Congregational Church which soon rose on the site. Maria Higginson, in her article A Tour of The Village, in Hawkesbury 1859-1984, reminisced: We walk up Main Street. On the opposite side is the old white church, a Congregational church It had 4 tall pillars, characteristic of many New England churches .. ,. In 1858, Rev. Joseph Elliot reported to the Canadian Congregational Missionary Society, that "We have, at Hawkesbury, a very oommodious church ediface.â A third daughter, Mg, was born on June 17th, 1846. She lived only 8 weeks and died on August 10th. It is assumed she was buried in the new Congregational burying ground in Hawkesbury. Two years later, a fourth daughter, Mm Ami/Minnie Lamb was 81 -------------- --------------- Above: M. Bymeâs House, LâOrigual, 1845. NAC C127644 Below: M. Lambâs (Hamihm Mills) CW. 1848. NAC C127622 82 -------------- --------------- born on June 11th, 1848, followed by a third son, John Hercus/Herk Lamb on September 11th, 1850. Both these children were baptized by Rev. Joseph Anderson, in the Congregational Chapel at Hawkesbury. School Days The ï¬rst school at Hawkesbury Mills was held in the log building on John Street built by the Hamiltons and also used by the Congregationalists and others for church services before it was sold in 1840. A paragraph in Hawkesbury 1859-1954, describes its successor, the Trestle School, likely the school the Lamb children attended. We have no deï¬nite date for the building of the Trestle School for it was built by the Hamiltons on Hamilton land. We assume it was built in the late 1830âs to replace the one sold on John Street. We know that in 1859, while operating at a semiprivate level, a charge was made of 26¢ per child per month, and it received a yearly $40. 00 grant from the village. A New and Useful Water Wheel 1842-1843 In Historic Mills of Ontario, the Mikas and Turner list the qualiï¬cations of a millwright as part architect, engineer, machinist and dam builder who had to be adaptable to constant changes in technical aspects of mill machinery, seasonal changes in water ï¬ow and choosing the size and ratios of mill machinery. The overall location, construction and design of mill buildings was also one of their concerns. John Lamb was always searching for a better way to create and make mill machinery. It was not long before he was experimenting with a new and more useful water-wheel, a wheel turned by running or falling water, used to supply power. Satisï¬ed that he had a better product, he applied for Letters Patent in both Upper and Lower Canada This included submitting a scale working model for his water-wheel, a three dimension blueprint and a written description of its ï¬inction. On October 3rd, 1842, John received Letters Patent, Upper Canada, #180, for the invention of a New and Useï¬tl Description of Water-wheel, Six months later, on April 3rd, 1843, he received Letters Patent, Lower Canada #63, for the invention of a New And Improved Water-wheel, Both patents were issued at Kingston, Upper Canada, when Kingston was the temporary capital of the United Canadas. It is not known if these water- wheels ever went into production; it is known that John went on inventing and improving more water-wheels and other mill machinery. Sketches from The Past About 1839, representatives from a number of Protestant churches, mostly Presbyterian, Baptist and Congregational, met in Montreal to form the French Canadian Missionary Society, to support French-speaking Protestant congregations and schools in Lower Canada and the eastern part of Upper Canada. Several Swiss French-speaking Protestant ministers and their families were brought to Canada by the Society, to serve the small scattered French congregations and schools. 83 -------------- --------------- One of these ministers was Rev. Jacques Frederic Doudiet, who came to Canada in 1844. Stationed at Belle Riviere about 10 miles northeast of St. Andrews, in Argenteuil County, M. Doudiet ï¬equently travelled through Hawkesbury to visit a small congregation in East Hawkesbury Twp, and on to other places in Glengarry County. He also visited Englishâspeaking congregations and individuals who supported the work of the French Canadian Missionary Society. Wherever he went, M. Doudiet kept a record of his travels, by sketching the homes of supporters of his work, each sketch dated and titled, Today the Doudiet sketchbook can be found in the National Archives of Canada, in Ottawa. Five of these sketches portray the homes of people living in Hawkesbury Mills and the nearby communities of Breadalbane, LâOrignal and St. Andrews. On June 19th,!845, M. Doudiet visited the home of Rev.William McKillican at Breadaibane, 12 miles south of Hawkesbury. Three months later, on September 17th, he travelled to LâOrignal where Rev. James T, Byme was the Congregational minister. Mr. Bymeâs home is shown in the foreground of the sketch but in the background is an unmistakable church building, thought to be the recently built Congregational Chapel at LâOrignal. Two years later, on May 26th 1847, M. Doudiet's sketch reads, Sr. André Deâpart a maison Dewar. This was likely the home of John Dewar, of St. Andrews, a brother of Mary Dewar Lamb, who was known to be a supporter of the French Canadian Missionary Society. On October 9th, 1848, M. Doudiet was in Hawkesbury Mills where he sketched two houses; one titled M. Hamilton - au Chenail, the otherM. Lamb's (Hamilton Mills) C. W. The latter was the home of John Lamb, on Main Street, also known as the High Way, in the village of Hawkesbury where the Lamb family lived until 1853. In the 20th century, the Lamb house became a very popular shop called Abrahamâs Ice Cream Parlour. About 1963, the original building was dismantled, the land becoming a parking lot. Whitby Sojaum In the fall of 1853, John Lamb sold his house and property in Hawkesbury and moved his family to Whitby, Ontario, a town on Lake Ontario about 30 miles east of Toronto. Two years earlier his old friend, Rev. James Byme had accepted a call to be minister of Whitby Congregational Church located at the comer of Mary and Byron Streets. Little is known of the ï¬ve years John and Mary Lamb and their family lived in Whitby. At that time there were many small mills on the streams in the area. It is thought that John Lamb may have worked in some of these. One event was remembered. It was at Whitby that John and Mary's eldest daughter, Elizabeth, then 21 years of age, met Thomas Gallagher, a widower, aged 39 years. Thomas had two daughters ï¬'om his ï¬rst marriage, Adeline (Addie), age 9 years, and Melissa, age 7 years. Rev. James Byme oï¬iciated at the marriage of Elizabeth and Thomas on June lst, 1858. John Lamb had always participated in the wider work of the Congregational Church and the Canadian Congregational Missionary Society, (C.C.M.S.) In the 18505 there had been much discussion among Congregationalists about the need for a Congregational presence in the capital city of the United Canadas. In 1858, after Queen 34 -------------- --------------- Victoria had announced her choice of Ottawa as the permanent seat of government, the C.C.M. S. decided to take action. In the early part of 1859, the Lamb family, including Thomas and Elizabeth Gallagher, leit Whitby and moved to the new capital, Ottawa. A Sparks Street Address In coming to Ottawa, John Lamb hoped to have a place large enough to set up his own business selling and servicing mill equipment including his own patented water wheel and other mill machinery. Shortly aï¬er arriving in Ottawa in 1859, he found a location on Sparks Street not far from his work at the Ottawa Mills of the McKay Milling Company on Chaudiere Island. On January 6th, 1860, John purchased Lot 8, south side of Sparks Street and the adjoining Lot 8, north side of Queen Street from John Bower Lewis, a lawyer and former mayor of Ottawa for £500. The property included a two story brick house facing Sparks Street with a wood frame extension at the rear, perhaps meant as a woodshed or summer kitchen. 0n the east side of the property there were three separate ï¬ame sheds. One may have been a small barn, for family stories tell of a cow being kept in the back yard. The other sheds provided space for an oï¬ice and workshop. John Lamb & San, Engineers Johnâs sons were to have a part in the business, John Lamb & Son, Engineers, Jim, now nineteen years old, was skilled in drawing plans, an architect and designer in the making. He worked with his father in setting up many small mills in the Ottawa area. In 1873, he was appointed to the Chief Architect's Branch, Department of Public Works of the Civil Service, a post he held for 48 years. Willie, almost seventeen, was a born salesman with an interest in meeting people. Soon he was working part-time as a clerk in Crosby's Boot and Shoe Store on Sparks Street as well as travelling in eastern Ontario and Quebec consulting with local mill owners and supervising the installation of mill equipment, About 1866 he opened his own boot and shoe store, called Hie Red Boot, on Sussex Street. Many years later, Jean McGibbon Gervan, whose daughter Eva, would marry Willie's son, Walter, in 1925, recalled Willie Lamb staying at her father's home in Brownsburg, Quebec, in the 1860's, while overseeing the installation of machinery in the McGibbon Mills. In a letter written in 1867, Willie told of staying with Ruben Lawrie and his family in St. Catharines, Ontario, while consulting about mill equipment for the Lawrie Mills in nearby Port Dalhousie. It was on this ï¬rst visit to St Catharines that Willie met Robert Lawrie's niece, Helen Lawrie Black, whom he married in 1868. Herk, the youngest in the family, seems to have apprenticed as an engineer under his father, then worked with him in the family business, John Lamb & Son, Engineers, 316- 320 Sparks Street in Ottawa. About 1866, a new survey by the City of Ottawa, assigned street numbers to the properties in this area. The Lamb home became 320 Sparks Street, the remaining property designated as 316 and 318 Sparks Street and 317-319-321 Queen Street. 85 -------------- --------------- ,.§%8 \a 55.8 3% 3Q 3235: 3833: 3R 58 on: .0 $550 , m =3. â a 313339» 1:6 .33: 63m 5.55 can .m .am :35 .~ 5.30 Egan .555 .â -------------- --------------- Ute McKay Mills at The Chuudiére On the south side of the great cataract known as the Chaudiere Falls on the Ottawa River are several fairly large islands separated by channels of swiï¬-ï¬owing water. By 1858, the islands and even the great cataract had been bridged providing easy access between Ottawa on the south side and Hull on the north side of the river. Chaudiére Island, near the south shore, was the location of the Ottawa Mills of the McKay Milling Co. owned by Thomas McKay, a nephew of the Honourable Thomas McKay who had built the ï¬rst mills at New Edinburgh and later, Rideau Hall, The Ottawa Mills are described as extensive and complete ï¬our and oatmeal mills. The company also had a warehouse and ofï¬ces on Sussex Street near St. Patrick. One report says that in the mid-19th century, oatmeal exports by the McKay Milling Co. to the British market were worth over $300,000 annually. John Lamb was one of the millwrights overseeing the mechanical operations at the Ottawa Mills, a short distance to Wellington Street, down the hill and across the bridges ï¬'om his Sparks Street home. Alter many years of operation, the McKay Milling Company's Ottawa mills on Chaudiere Island were completely destroyed in the Great Fire of April 26th, 1900, which razed Hull, then crossed the Chaudiere islands and spread to the west end of Ottawa before being extinguished. A Royal Visitor Comes to Ottawa In the summer of 1860, the Prince of Wales, later Edward VII, came to Canada to lay the cornerstone of the new Parliament Buildings being built on Barracks Hill in Ottawa. On August 3 1 st, he travelled up the Ottawa River from Montreal on the steamer Phoenix, escorted by six other steamers and many small boats and canoes. Near his destination, lumberrnen ï¬'om up and down the Ottawa valley joined the procession in more than one hundred large canoes. The residents along the Ontario and Quebec shores watched in awe as this amazing procession of boats passed their homes, Among those who watched was Jim Lamb, then nineteen years of age, Early that morning Jim made his way east ï¬'om his home on Sparks Street to the rocky bluï¬âs high above the Ottawa River near Rockliï¬âe. There he sat and waited, sketchbook in hand, As the procession of steamers and boats passed below on the river, he made sketches of the scene. Later from his sketches, he painted the scene in watercolours, detailing each of the seven steamers led by the Phoenix and over one hundred canoes providing the escort for the Prince of Wales, He titled the watercolour, "Reception of HRH. The Prince of Wales at Ottawa, Canada, Augt 31.31 1860, Lumbennen's River Escort. " This family treasure remains in the possession of a great-granddaughter. The following day, September lst, 1860, crowds gathered on Barracks Hill, later called Parliament Hill, as the Prince of Wales ofï¬cially laid the cornerstone for the Parliament Buildings. No doubt, all the Lamb family joined the crowds for this festive event just four blocks from their home on Sparks Street. 87 -------------- --------------- First Congregational Church Elgin & Albert Streets c, 1862. Comerstones of on donalism l) Fmdom to interpret the truth of the Bible under the guidance of the Holy Spirit. 2) Openness and tolerance tnwards others with diï¬erem, distinctive beliefs. 3) Local responsï¬ility for church organization and property. â5â GKEérATIGH I CHOWâ - âTrï¬sï¬- 0 mm // / First Congregational Church? Florence & Kent Streets, Ottawa. sketched by William Alexander Lamb c, 1915, It became First United Church in 1925. 88 -------------- --------------- A Congregational Church Renewed Shortly alter moving to Ottawa, John Lamb received a letter dated June 17th, 1859, from Rev. Kenneth M. Fenwick, of Kingston, Home Secretary of the Canadian Congregational Missionary Society (C.C.M.S.). The letter had ï¬rst been sent to Rev. Henry Wilkes, minister of Zion Congregational Church in Montreal, who appended a short note with some speciï¬c procedural suggestions and his own encouragement Mr. Fenwick reported on a recent meeting of the C.C.M.S. in Toronto when it was decided to encourage and support a Congregational interest in Ottawa and to invite Rev. Joseph Elliot, of Hawkesbury, to undertake this mission. He asked John Lamb to inform Congregational friends of this decision and to consider what interim arrangements might be needed pending Mr. Elliot's arrival. Earlier, in 1846, an attempt had been made to establish a Congregational Church in Bytown under the auspices of the London Missionary Society (L.M.S.) when Rev, James Byme, appointed by the L.M.S., came from Hawkesbury to give leadership to the new congregation. At ï¬rst the small group met in the Oddfellows' Hall on St. Paul/Besserer Street in Lower Bytown. Soon a church building was begun on the west side of Elgin Street near Sparks Street. About ï¬ve years later the L.M.S. withdrew its support. The partly-built church building was sold and became known as the Temperance Hall, shared with a group of Baptists. Mr. Byme was succeeded in 1851 by Rev. Richard Miles, who remained until 1857. When he leï¬, the congregation ceased to meet. John Lamb needed no further encouragement to contact the few people attached to the earlier Congregational cause. On March 10th, 1860, the ï¬rst meeting of Congregationalists was held in the Temperance Hall with Rev. Henry Wilkes, of Montreal, Rev. Kenneth M. Fenwick of Kingston, and Rev. Joseph Elliot, of Hawkesbury, present. A list of 22 charter members transferring from other congregations included John Lamb, Mary Lamb, Thomas Gallagher and Elizabeth Gallagher from Whitby Congregational Church. A unanimous call was extended to Rev. Joseph Elliot, who being present, accepted forthwith. Two deacons, John Lamb and John Gibson, were appointed. Sunday worship services were held morning and evening in the Temperance Hall, with John Lamb as precentor. Wednesday evening prayer meetings were followed by a congregational meeting or sometimes a special committee meeting, In 1861 a ï¬nance committee was appointed and the following year a lot was purchased on the southwest corner of Elgin and Albert Streets for a new church building. The architect was H.H.Horsey, of Kingston, and the building contractors, Gallagher & Hodgson of Ottawa. The building of the church of local blue stone, proceeded quickly. The cornerstone was laid on May 19th, 1862 and the church held opening services on October 19th, although the building was not completely ï¬nished inside. With the move of the Parliament of the United Canadas ï¬'om Quebec City to Ottawa in 1865 with many of its employees, there was a considerable increase in the population of Ottawa, some joining First Congregational Church, The Organ Question Shortly aï¬er the Congregational Church was built, many of the younger members began discussing the possibility of having an organ to provide the music for worship. This 89 -------------- --------------- out... :13 38% 3% A «in. aim an .5 gm $6... at N .Hzï¬ci E Q ¢/// gï¬wém . ,// .32 .3 Ea: 5â02 3.5.. 333:: . .83 3:3 .2 8355 .35: a 53: E36 mo ha 2a a. 8:835 §u§§§a ,Smsï¬jazteï¬axegï¬ï¬Ã©oi ,uuaâ Ganâum .53 3 âa 3 guns:â uo «Stuyvth S. 550:8» :33 53.0.3 2: .n «.53: non:â 340333.19: *0 am 33335 :2; :33 1.3.6 3 3d. .83 an. 5? Anna}. 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Juinï¬ nnmuuano 2.: 3 E»: :3. .3828 2: 3nd tunâv05 a: maoBu van .3: be: customs; um unmwuoEu. 29320.0:50 inseam an »<I..;.:o :85 5an 2n n ouï¬ Suoï¬mnm .EOW i nEwlâ £505 90 -------------- --------------- issue was being raised among many Protestant churches at the time. John Lamb, for one, did not like the idea, but then he would no longer be needed as precentor. Wisely, he decided to let the younger members have their way. At a congregational meeting in January, 1866, âit was moved and seconded, that we have no objection to the aid of instrumental music in this place of worship.â The motion carried. Shortly alter, a used organ was purchased and installed. This was replaced with a new organ in 1871. One of the early organists was John Lambâs granddaughter, Hettie Gallagher (1859- 1924). Many years later, another granddaughter, Edith Lamb (1870-1955) was organist and choir director from 1917-1935. The Fenian Threat Ottawa always had a military presence since the days of Bytown and the building of the Rideau Canal. Over the years, companies of volunteers or militia had been raised, then disbanded a few years later. In 1866 and again in 1870, Canada was under threat of invasion along the St. Lawrence River ï¬'ontier by the Fenians who gathered their forces at various places on the American side of the borderi The Fenians were a rogue Irish independence movement in the United States who thought they could help their cause in Ireland by invading Canada. Young Ottawa men, including Jim and Herk Lamb, responded to the call for volunteers. In 1866, Jim served with the 3rd Ottawa Regiment at Cornwall, Four years later, Herk enlisted in the 151 Ottawa Riï¬e Company which, along with other militia units, was sent to Prescott, one of the danger points along the St. Lawrence River. The lst Ottawa Riï¬e Company was at Prescott ï¬'om May 25th to June 20th, 1870, when the threat of Fenian Raids was stopped quickly by the intervention of the American government. New Patents In 1866, John Lamb was granted patent No. 2088 under an Act of the Parliament of Canada, for A New And Useï¬rl Water Wheel, dated 23rd August 1866. Called the lamb Water Turbine, it was featured in advertisements of John Lamb & Son, Engineers. These turbines were compact and strong, producing power much more efï¬ciently than earlier water wheels. Four years later, on March 5th, 1870, patent No. 269 (New Series) for A Machine For Separating Greats From Other Grain, was issued to J. Lamb of Ottawa. This was advertised as Lamb âs Patent Grout Screen. 113. Lamb, John's son Jim, received a patent, No. 1606 (New Series) for Improvement in Binding Rollers, issued Slst August 1872. The machinery patented and sold by the Lambs was manufactured to their speciï¬cations by N. S. Blasdell, a foundry on Chaudiére Island well known for their implements and tools. In eastern Canada the Lamb Water Turbineâs biggest competition came from the American-made Leffel water wheel. Some mills even used turbines ï¬'om both companies. Hence the need to advertise the Lamb Water Turbine as widely as possible. John Lamb offered facts and testimonials from satisï¬ed mill owners. A circular published about 1882 had testimonials from mil] owners in such communities as Lachute Mills, Danville, Chelsea, Buckingham, Kazabazua and Hull in Quebec, and Hawkesbury, Plantagenet, Amprior, 91 -------------- --------------- JOHN LAMB 8L SON, I/Wz/Zwi/z'g/zzâs, Eng/Hears, (SW. 320 SPARKS STREET, OTTAWA. a \I.\sur.u' ru luck: or »7 Resawing,Shingle,and bath and Picket Machines, And other Saw Mill Machinery, Water Wheels, an. ins" "WV NEW WHEAT SGOURER. H'nrrnuhâd n: Wï¬ua/{I' mum lire/nu am! all I'm/rI/rr/fu {lg/"rim: m Ill! umIIIl/(lï¬m'xâ .[ fimnz JOHN LAMB & SON ENGINEERS, â Sparks Street, - - Ottawa. The Cnnnrnctinn or FLOURlXG. BARLEY. OATMEAL i: SAW MILLS â11va 7'0. l GANG LATH MACHINES, ' v mm gang: (yâfrmn we to 1:» mm. LAMB'S PATENT GROAT SCREEN, A5117 m. limbs or The n ongmvmg represents ourw withou case, and so exceedingly plum EXIST & SAW MILL FURNISHINGS made in order. and Sim ' he â1th in â8 consu'mï¬wly ' ' ny furl.th- explauatinn is necest or however an assist those inter? a intimnta acquaint-Luce itlf ' ' _ â xi culinr advantages .3- DaubIeâActmn Water Wheel, m weâ .rgï¬ï¬rks Wk Wmm 7nd,. â3â7 0" Hmâ- ' horizontél: usï¬mdto which we be' , special attention of all ownérs of Waterliowor,â jaLANS AND FPECâFICATloNS nnd building Engineers" _We: belidva_then â â are many mill and facmry- owners who are yet. mu Work, sway. of Mm Sun; We?! labouring under the delusion that. the gromm- â Dawn-.1", «4., had: out n modu-nl- nin- the coat, and the morgintx'igattf and mm ' â «L; â5,â ALL SlZES or: LAMBâS Above â Lamb business card. Below - Lamb advertisements. 92 -------------- --------------- Carleton Place, Galetta, Oxford Mills and Ottawa in Ontario, Some mills had as many as ï¬ve Lamb Turbines. The E. B. Eddy Company of Hull, Quebec, had four Lamb Water Turbines using water from the Ottawa River, Nearly a century later these turbines were still in daily use in the Eddy mills and only ceased operation when the mills were sold and dismantled to make space for the Museum of Civilization, which opened in 1989, At times, John Lamb and his sons, visiting a mill site on mill business, were asked or perhaps offered to help with local community or church events. In 1872, Andrew Pritchard of Kazabazua, Quebec, engaged John Lamb to install one or more Lamb Water Turbines in his mill on the Gatineau River, some 50 miles north of Ottawa. At that time the local Methodists needed someone to draw up plans for the church they hoped to build. The annals of the Methodist Church, which became Kazabazua United Church in 1925, say the church was built in the summer of 1872 with plans sketched by the architects, l. C. Chamberlain and John Lamb, The Gallagher: of Ottawa Shortly aï¬er Elizabeth Jane Lamb married Thomas Gallagher (1819-1882) in Whitby, they moved to Ottawa where Thomas began his own construction ï¬rm of Gallagher and Hodgson. One of the ï¬rm's ï¬rst contracts was the building of the new Congregational Church at the comer of Elgin and Albert Streets. Thomas and Elizabeth's home was on Metcalfe Street near Maria Street, later called Laurier Avenue. They had four children, all born in Ottawa. The ï¬rst three were daughters: Henrietta/Hettie Gallagher born in 1859, Elizabeth/Libby Annie Gallagher, in 1861, and M Eleanor Galla er in 1863. Mary Eleanor only lived about six months and died in 1864. A son, Thomas/Tom Lincoln Gallagher was born in 1865. All the family attended the Congregational Church. On November l2th, 1868, Elizabeth died at 32 years of age, leaving three young children, the eldest, Hettie only 9 years old. Elizabeth was buried in Beechwood Cemetery. The following year, 1869, Thomas married a young widow, Mary Streit. For a time, Thomas worked as a civil servant in the federal government in Ottawa. He died in 1882. In 1894, Libby married Frank H. Till, of Toronto. Three years later, in 1897, Tom married Alice Squarey. Both families lived in Toronto. Hettie remained in Ottawa. In 1904 she married Thomas Birkett, (1844-1920), a widower and former mayor of Ottawa and member of parliament. Earlier, in 1896, he had built a large house at 306 Metcalfe Street, sometimes referred to as Birkett's Castle from its castellated roof-line. In the 20th century it was designated as a heritage building in Ottawa and later became home of the Heritage Foundation of Canada. Thomas Birkett died in 1920 and Hettie in 1924. Both are buried in Beechwood Cemetery. The Roddens of Ottawa Move to Montreal, 187 7. Kate Lamb married William Richard John Rodden (1836-1899) of Montreal in 1861 in Ottawa. In Montreal, the Rodden family had a large ornamental iron business and were active members of Zion Congregational Church. William Rodden & Co. manufactured and sold iron columns, stairs, architectural iron-work, beds, stoves and other household items. For some years Richard was the Ottawa agent for the company. 93 -------------- --------------- Kate and Richard had seven children, all born in Ottawa. The eldest, a daughter, was Ida Amelia Rodden (1864-1940), followed by two sons, William/Ellie Thomas Rodden (1865-1946) and Francis/Frank Alexander Rodden (1867-1923). A second daughter, Minnie Helen Rodden (1870-1931) and a third son, Richard Montgomery/Many Rodden (1871-1965) were followed by two daughters, Ruby Catherine/Puss Rodden (1873-1959) and Veronica/0mg Rodden (1875â1951). About 1877, the Rodden family left Ottawa for the Montreal suburb of Cote St. Antoine, later a part of Westmount. All the family except Ida, married and all but Onie, remained in the Montreal area. Onie married Jesse Folsom Johnson and moved to Cincinnati, Ohio, USA. Richard Rodden died in 1899. Nine years later, in 1908, Kate passed away. Kate, Richard and all the family are buried in Mount Royal Cemetery in Montreal. In the late 19305, Ida Rodden visited her cousin, Edith Lamb, in Ottawa, She is remembered as a tall gracious lady, a great knitter, who had the pink complexion, twinkling blue eyes, snow white hair and warm smile, so familiar in the Lamb family. Ida died shortly after this visit. A Golden Celebration, 1885 John Lamb and Mary Dewar were married at St. Andrews, Argenteuil County, on November 4th, 1835. Fiï¬y years later they celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary with a gathering at First Congregational Church in Ottawa. This excerpt from the Daily Citizen of November 5th, 1885 describes the event. Golden WeddingAnniversary Mr and Mrs John Lamb, who are among the oldest and most respected residents of Ottawa, celebrated the ï¬ftieth anniversary of their wedding yesterday. In the evening they received the hearty congratulations of a large number of relatives and friends, and were the recipients of many handsome mementoes of the high esteem in which they are held The members of the Congregational Church, in which they me active workers, presented an address, accompanied by an elegant gold brooch, set with pearls, from the ladies of the congregation to Ms Lamb. Ihe address, which is one of Mr Medlowâs masterpieces, was enclosed in a magniï¬cent gilt frame, the illuminated border being a most beautiful piece of work. The following is the text; Beloved Friends, Kindly permit us, in the name of the Congregational Church in this City, of which you have been honoured members ï¬om its organization, to join your family in their congratulations on your attaining today, the Fiftieth Anniversary of your marriage. We rejoice with you in the health and vigour you still enjoy, and in the good Providence of God you have been brought through all the vicissitudes of this earthly life, to see yourselves surrounded, on this happy 94 -------------- --------------- occasion, by your children and grandchildren, all of them beloved and respected in the community, and giving hope of their walking in the paths of Piety, Temperance and Virtue, in which you have led the way, May the dear Lord and Master, whom you have sought to honour, graciously bring them all to know Him, and may He long spare you to them, and to each other, imparting to you increasingly the joys of His Salvation, and making your declining years more joyous, if possible, than your earlier ones â"At evening time it shall be light. â â The God of Peace be with you, and be your guide even unto death. The address was read by Rev Mr (John) Wood. Mr Lamb, who with his atbnirable wife. was taken completely by surprise - both being visibly aï¬ected - replied with a few happy remarks, after which the company present was entertained with light good old-fashioned hospitality. A very pleasant hour was passed the enjwment being enhanced by some choice selections of music by members of the choir. Mr aners Lamb have reached their 77th and 75th years respectively, but are still hole and hearty with every prospect of fulï¬lling their many friendsâ good wishes, that they may yet enjoy a number of years of continued happiness and prosperity. Skits, Stunts and Musical Events In the early years of First Congregational Church, the minutes of the congregational meetings often record John Lamb responsible for arranging entertainment, the planning of an evening program of skits, stunts and always, music. At that time most people expected to participate, needing only to be asked. On occasion, the choir provided an evening of music. Edith Lamb and her younger brother, Walter, recalled their grandfather, John Lamb, gathering many of his twenty grandchildren together and coaching them in recitations, songs, skits and choruses. Sometimes the boys performed gymnastic stunts. Some played the piano, others sang solos or duets, one was remembered playing his trombone, and John himself played his bassoon. The church newsletter, The Congregational Record, in its March 1886 issue, described one event in these words: At one of our meetings this month, we had the rather unusual spectacle of a grandfather singing a song and his granddaughter playing the accompaniment. There might not be anything extraordinary about the occurrence had not the song been sung with all the spirit of a young man, The singer was Mr. John Lamb who celebrated his golden wedding last fall. The granddaughter could have been either Hettie Gallagher, then twenty-six, or Edith Lamb, then ï¬ï¬een years ofage. Both were accomplished pianists and organists. 95 -------------- --------------- The Tea PotAccoumâ Like most women of her generation, Mary Lamb lived and worked quietly behind the scenes, creating a home for her husband and family. Very few relics remain to tell of her life. One known item is her account book with The T ea Pat, a grocery shop in Ottawa. The small leatherâbound book measuring 4 by 6 inches, opens with these words, âMrs John Lamb, Sparks Street, in a/c with John Hill, The Tea Pot, Rideau Street, Ottawa.â The lined pages have vertical columns for the store clerk to enter the date, quantity of the purchased item and the price, with the total amount owed at the bottom of the page. Payments were made periodically in cash. The pages are interleaved with blotting paper which prevented the writing in ink from being smeared when the page was turned or the book closed. Most purchases listed in the account book cost less than one dollar. Some were household items such as soap, brooms and brushes, washing soda and candles; others were food items, tinned salmon, oysters, peas and tomatoes, various cereals, oatmeal, barley and rice, several kinds of biscuits, frequently cheese, butter, most oï¬en in prints,but sometimes in 20 pound tubs, eggs at 10 cents a dozen, rarely oranges and lemons. Once a month, Mary, Mrs John Lamb, as she was known in the trade, purchased one pound of Japan or green tea and, once in a while, a pound of black tea. At 65 to 75 cents a pound tea was by far the most expensive item on her grocery list. Twice each month, Mary bought 10 pounds of granulated sugar at 10 cents a pound, easily the largest purchase. The account book was provided by John Hill, who operated The Tea Pot between January 6th 1877 and September 2nd, 1879. There are no further entries until August 6th, 1884, when entries resume under the name of Scott & Ramsford. The account was paid in hill on July 2nd, 1886, two days alter Mary's death on June 30th. The Tea Pot account book remains in the Lamb family. A Sudden Passing Mary Lambâs death seems to have been quite unexpected. It was not until mid-June of 1886 when guests arriving for the annual meeting of the Congregational Union of Ontario and Quebec realized that she was not her usual self. Her health failed quickly and she died at home, surrounded by her family on June 30th, the day before her 75th birthday, The ï¬rneral took place in First Congregational Church followed by burial in Beechwood Cemetery. John and Herk continued to live in their Sparks Street home and carry on the business of Johir Lamb & Son, Engineers. The Porters Emigrrue to Boston, 1886 My Ann Lamb, the fourth daughter of John and Mary, was always called Minnie. On May 30th, 1872, Minnie married Thomas/Tom Porter, in Ottawa. Tom was bom at Lyme Regis, County Dorset, England, in 1848 and came to Canada with his family. In Ottawa he owned a tea shop on Rideau Street at the comer of Sussex Street. In some notes about his childhood years in Ottawa, Tom Porters nephew, Arthur/Art Lamb (1874- 1944), recalled visiting Porter's Tea Shop. From windows over the shop, Art and his cousins watched the parade of soldiers marching up Rideau Street on their return ï¬om the 96 -------------- --------------- Riel Rebellion of 1885. Minnie and Tom had six children, the ï¬rst ï¬ve born in Ottawa. Their ï¬rst child, William Alli-ed Porter, born October 30th, 1873, lived only about 3 months and died February 16th, 1874, A daughter, Minnie Maud Porter, was born later in 1874, followed by two sons, Wilï¬'ed/Wilf Hardy Porter, in 1877 and Thomas Percival/Percy Porter, in 1880. A second daughter, Aveline/Avelyn Alice Porter was born in 1883. In 1886, Minnie, Tom and their family moved to Boston where a third daughter, Bemice Marion Porter, was born in 1892. From time to time, members of the Porter family returned to Ottawa to visit their Lamb cousins. One such visit occurred about 1912 when Avelyn Porter came from Boston to stay with her Uncle Jim and Aunt Maggie Lamb at their home on Gilmour Street. One evening, her Uncle Jim invited a young man, recently from Scotland, who worked with him in the Department of Public Works in Ottawa, to the Lamb home for dinner. Charlie Ewen, a native of Aboyne, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, was captivated by the young American cousin, Avelyn Porter. Several years later, they were married in Ottawa where they lived for many'years. They had one daughter, Jean Loma Avelyn Ewen, who married David Henderson Gervan in 1939. Both Tom and Minnie Lamb Porter died in Boston; Tom in 1922 and Minnie in 1936. Bedridden! Two and a half years after Maryâs death, John Lamb, always blessed with good health, suffered a severe stroke in December, 1889, at eighty years of age, leaving him completely paralysed on his lett side and conï¬ned to bed. Needing constant care, John was moved to the Gilmour Street home of his eldest son, Jim and his wife Maggie Black, who had married in 1873. Herk closed the business and the Sparks Street part of the property was sold. For the next ï¬ve and a half years, Maggie looked aï¬er her father-in-law, with help ï¬'om Herk, Jim, and Willie and their families. During this time John had occasional visitors including his minister, Rev. John Wood. Many years later, a note written to Mr. Wood by John while bedridden, was returned to Lamb family. The handwriting rambles over the page but the intent of the message is clear: Revd John Wood, I had hoped Dear Sir, to hear you preach as usual, but I ï¬nd our Lord would have me keep bed a little longer, and! have good reason to be content. He has been so kind to me all my days and not the least since my sickness and I thank you for your kindness in calling to see me and bringing to mind the words of Jesus. I will be glad to hear from you. I intend to go to Montreal as soon as I am able and hope to see you. Please write me. Yours truly, John Lamb. 97 -------------- --------------- Gone to His Rest With these words an unidentiï¬ed newspaper clipping dated May 11th, 1895, announced the passing of John Lamb in his 86th year, on Friday, May 10th. It continues, For ï¬ve yemâs, he has been conï¬ned to his room with paralysis, and recently became worse until last night, when death relieved him of his suï¬eringsi His obituary in The Canadian Independent, published by the Congregational Union of Ontario and Quebec, June 1895, speaks of his part in church life. He was mainly instrumental in organizing and supporting the Congregational cause, being Deacon, Sunday School teacher, and musical instructor, and his conscientious, faithful work there is written in the annals of eternity He was ever ready with a kind word and deed for anyone in need and it was always given in a most cheerful and hearty way which was entirely in accord with his unselfish disposition. He had unusual conï¬dence in the honesty and good purposes of others, and only with great reluctance would he ever admit their intentional wrongdoing His funeral was held in First Congregational Church on Sunday aï¬emoon, May 12th, Burial followed in Beechwood Cemetery. A Tribute to John Lamb, Inventor, 1920 An unexpected tribute to John Lamb was given some twenty-ï¬ve years later in a paper prepared by William S, Lynch, Chief of the Canadian Patent Office, for the Women's Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa, on Early Patents For Inventions Granted to Residents of Ottawa. His paper, delivered on December 10th, 1920, lists the patents obtained by John Lamb, among others, with a biief outline of his life, including these words: The results of his services are still in evidence throughout the provinces of Ontario, Quebec and Nova Scotia. He originated and introduced many improvements in grain cleaning and reducing machinery and wood working machines, and the distinctive features of his "Turbine Water Wheels, "patented by him in Canada, are vital parts of the most popular wheels now in use. To future generations, his children and grandchildren passed down a sense of love and admiration for this manyâfaceted man, always speaking with awe at his many lifetime accomplishments. Herk Leaves for the Klondike Alter the death of his father in 1895, Herk continued to live with his brother, Jim, 98 -------------- --------------- and his family on Gilmour Street. Then came the Klondike Gold Rush! In mid 1896, word that gold had been discovered along the Klondike River in the Yukon, spread like wildï¬re. In a very short time thousands were making their way to the northwest, sure they would ï¬nd gold. There were headlines in the newspapers, stories of gold found in the rivers, songs and poetry written about this road to riches. The railways and steamships published ads crying, "Ho for the Klondike!â and âThe Klondike or bust!" Typical is this verse printed in a local paper, All you miners wide awake! Go to the Klondike, make your stake; Get out your pick, your pan, your pack, Go to the Klondike, donât come back H0 for the Klondike. Ho! Herk, possibly with his cousin, Will Lamb (1856-1927), decided to join the multitudes on the trek to the Klondike. The gold rush was over by 1899. Only a few made a fortune; most returned home no richer than when they went. Will Lamb came back to Ottawa but Herk remained in the northwest. In 1900, Herk was living at Atlin, British Columbia, a town south of Whitehorse near the Yukon-BC. border. Little was heard from him over the years. In 1911, in response to a letter from Herk, his brother, Jim, wrote: We are gradually getting over the shock of getting your letter of Thursday last. We had begun to wonder whether you were going to be one of those "never heard ofsâ and so we were glad to get your letter and know thatyou were still in Canada Later in the letter Jim says, âYou did not say how you came out of the Klondike deal By 1914, Herk was living in Vancouver. Aï¬er an absence of thirty years and little contact with his family, about 1928, Herk returned to Ottawa, sick and penniless. He lived with his brother, Willie, and his nieces, Edith and Ethel Lamb. Herk is remembered as a thin, jovial man, candies always in his jacket pockets for the children in the family. Herk died in 1936 in his 86th year and was buried beside his parents in Beechwood Cemetery. He leï¬ no will, only a pile of worthless mining stock certiï¬cates. Two pieces of jewelry remained in the Lamb family; a man's tie pin with a small pure gold nugget and a long hat pin for a woman's hat of the 1912 era with a large gold nugget. Later generations assumed the nuggets were relics of Herk's Klondike days. Settling an Estate At ï¬rst, John Lamb's will seemed very simple. His estate was to be divided into six equal parts, one part for each of his live living children, the sixth to be divided into three equal parts, one for each of Elizabeth Gallagher's surviving children, Hettie Gallagher, Libby Gallagher Till, and Tom Gallagher. 99 -------------- --------------- Most assets could be divided quite easily. The problem was how to divide or dispose of the Queen Street property consisting of three city lots. Only Jim and Willie Lamb and their niece, Hettie Gallagher, were living in Ottawa. Herk was in the Yukon or B.C., Kate in Montreal, Minnie in Boston and Libby Till and Tom Gallagher, in Toronto. Jim, employed in the Department of Public Works, knew the federal government was looking for storage space in central Ottawa and was offering long-term leases for the kind of space they required. Realizing the Queen Street property was an ideal site for a warehouse, Jim and Willie proposed to form a partnership and offer to buy out the othersâ interest in the property, providing they could arrange a long-term lease and raise the mortgage money to build the warehouse. The others agreed. The Lamb Building By August 1900, arrangements were completed, plans for the warehouse drawn up, mortgages and a long-term lease obtained and a contract with the builder, signed. Jim looked alter the building and technical matters; Willie dealt with ï¬nances and business details. In many ways the brothers complimented one another. Willie's account ledger, beginning in 1900, is still kept in the Lamb family. In a few months a two story red brick building rose on the Queen Street site, known as the Lamb Building at 319 Queen Street. The Department of Public Works moved into the almost finished building on March lst, 1901, paying three months rent in advance. Willie made a chart at the ï¬'ont of his ledger showing the amount of principal owed to each of the others named in John Lamb's will with interest paid quarterly. The payments were made on time during the next four years and by the end of 1904, all debts owing to family members were paid in full. All seemed to go smoothly at the Lamb Building for about 10 years. Then The Fireworks Show In a letter to his brother, Herk, dated June 11th 1911, Jim Lamb describes this unexpected event. Jim and Willie sometimes referred to each other by their initials; Jim was J .B. and Willie, W.A. Beginning in August of 1910, a two story annex of matching red brick was added on the east side of the original building. Jim tells of the event in these words: I wonder if you have heard anything of the ï¬re works show Will and I gave here one day last winter The Govât wanted more room than we had for them in our Queen St. building and W.A. oï¬ered to build an addition to it. Yhey agreed to pay the rent we asked and up went the annex. lt wasjusl about ready at the beginning of the year (1911) when on the 4th of January in the manufacture of methylated spirits some of the stuï¬ got mixed up with the electric motor and the old part of the building was all red hot in a few minutes. It was a good day for aï¬re as there was a ï¬erce icy blizzard blowing. All the woodwork of the old building was burnt and some damage in the new wing We had some insurance but not as much as the ï¬re cost us. It was only last week that the whole of the 100 -------------- --------------- building was taken over by the Depât again. There was a large stock of spirits in at that time but only one barrel caught so it might have been worse than it was. The govenunent remained as tenants for some thirty years, ï¬nally moving out in 1933 at the height of the Great Depression of the 19305. The building stood empty for three years. As the economy improved in the late [9305, new tenants were found. Alter Jimâs death in 1923, the building was jointly owned by the IE. Lamb estate and Willie. When Willie died in 1935, Willie's younger son, Walter Lamb, purchased the interest of the J. B. Lamb estate, becoming the sole owner. The Lamb Building ï¬nally passed from the Lamb family when it was sold in 1958, Today the land lies under one of Ottawaâs downtown towers a short walk from Parliament Hill. [intertwined Families Jim and Willie Lamb's descendants oï¬en described the two families as one big family because so many of their activities interconnected over the years, making it difï¬cult to write about one family and not include the other. About 1865, Willie Lamb visited St. Catharines on behalf of John Lamb & Son, Engineers, to meet and discuss mill machinery with Robert Lawrie who, with his brother, John Lawrie, owned the Lawrie Flour Mills in nearby Port Dalhousie. As a guest of the Lawrie family, Willie joined the Lawries for Sunday services at the Scotch Presbyterian Church, later renamed Knox Presbyterian Church, He was delighted when an acappella choir of young women sang several anthems. He was even more delighted to meet two of the choir members, Helen Lawrie Black, and her sister, Magdalene/Maggie Bone Black, at the Lawrie home. Their mother, Helen Bone Black, who died in 1855, was a ï¬rst cousin of Robert Lawrie. Lawries, Bond and Blacks The Lawrie family came to Canada in 1837 ï¬'om their home in East Lothian, also called Haddingtonshire, in Scotland. For centuries, Lawrie and Bone families had lived in the Parishes of Innerwick and Oldhamstocks in the southern part ofEast Lothian where the Larnmermuir Hills reach down to the North Sea, There, Robert Lawrieâs father, John (17864863) had owned a grist mill on Dunglass Burn below the village ofOldhamstocks. In Canada, John Lawrie, his wife, Margaret Davidson, their ï¬ve sons and two daughters, settled on a farm on Lot 16 & part of Lot 15, Concession HI, Grantham Twp, about two miles north of St. Catharines. Three of the Lawrie sons, Robert (1818-1905), John Jr,(1820-]877) and William (1827-1859) built a ï¬our mill at nearby Port Dalhousie where their families lived for some years. In 1863, Robert Lawrie and his wife, Eleanor Pawling, moved to a home on Race Street in St Catharines. In Scotland the Lawries were members of the United Secession Church. When they came to Canada they joined the Scotch Presbyterian Church in St Catharines, providing nine of the twenty-four charter members when it was formed in 1841. In 1852, Thomas Bone, a ï¬rst cousin of Robert Lawrie, emigrated to Canada with his family and also settled in St. Catharines. Thomas was well known for his work as a . g : . I; H. I. 101 -------------- --------------- 40(210 oz<4m. nz<mo .3: a 33 88.0 .82 932 NEW kaâ q oz<....:<: Ema uzzogoo Eon xmzqz Swizz; mazeâ:3 Eon Q\QYK>\Q m.qu 52m .v 22 .532 .n E: 0.55 52 .N 252 2.33 g 102 -------------- --------------- Baptist minister for almost forty years with the Welland Canal Mission working with sailors on the canal, Two years later, in 1854, another ï¬rst cousin of Robert Lawrie, Helen Bone Black, her husband, John Black(1819-1885) and their four children, John Kirkwood Black, age 11, Jamieson Bone Black, age 8, Helen Lawrie Black, age 6, and Maggie Bone Black, age 3, am'ved in Port Dalhousie from Scotland. John, a cooper, was employed at the Lawrie Mills, 011 April 10th, 1855, tragedy stnick. An obituary in the St. Catharines Constitution of April 11th, 1855, tells the story: At Port Dalhousie on the 1 01h inst. immediately after childbirth, Helen, wife of John Black, both nieces of John Lawrie, Grantham Twp. Helen Bone Black, age 37 years, was buried in St, Andrews Cemetery Port Dalhousie. The baby, Janet/Jen lived and was cared for by John Blackâs sister, Margaret, who lived with them. Three year old, Maggie, went to live with Robert Lawrie and his wife, Eleanor, who had no children of their own and lived nearby in Port Dalhousie. The other children, John, Jamieson and Helen, grew up moving back and forth between the Black and Lawrie homes. By 1865, Helen and Maggie were singing in the choir at the Scotch Presbyterian Church. in St Catharines, which all the family attended. Brothm Marry Sisters In July of 1867, Willie Lamb wrote a letter, still in existence, to Helenâs father, John Black of Port Dalhousie, telling him of their desire to marry. Aï¬er stating his favourable business prospects as owner of The Red Boot, a boot and shoe store in Ottawa, and their plans to marry in a year or two, Willie asked for his blessing on their marriage, At the time of the letter it appeared that Helen was living in St Catharines with the Robert Lawries Pemiission must have been given, as Willie and Helen were married on November 12, 1868 in St Catharines, later taking up residence in Ottawa. Willie and Helen had ï¬ve children all born at home in Ottawa. The eldest was a daughter, Edith Helen Lamb born October 21st 1870, followed by four sons, William Hmert Lamb, born June 28th, 1872, John Arthur Lamb born June 1st, 1874, Charles Kirkwood Lamb born September 1st, 1876, and Walter James Thornton Lamb on December 26th, 1878, Two of the boys died in early childhood, William Herbert on August 4th, 1875, just 3 yearsof age, and Charles Kirkwood, on September 24th, 1876, only 23 days old. The early 1870s brought a general economic depression in Canada and Willie found it necessary to close The Red Boot on Sussex Street. For several years he worked as a bookkeeper; then joined the Confederation Life Insurance Company as one of their agents in Ottawa, remaining for over thirty years, It is uncertain just when Willie's brother, Jim met Helen's sister, Maggie. It is certain they were married in St, Catharines on November 13th, 1873, then made their home in Ottawa, Jim and Maggie had three children born in Ottawa. A son, Robert/Bob Lawrie m was born in 1875 followed by a daughter, Ethel Florence Lamb in 1877, and a 103 -------------- --------------- second son, William/Billy Herbert Lamb in 1881. Both families took an active part in the life of First Congregational Church, Willie and Jim were life deacons and trustees. Helen and Maggie actively participated in the Ladies Aid and the Womanâs Board of Home Missions Wednesday night was Prayer Meeting; Thursday night, choir practice. There were morning and evening services on Sunday and Sunday School in the aï¬emoon. It made for a close church and family community Song and Poetry from Scotland Broad Scots was the language the Blacks and Lawries brought to Canada. This dialect of nor-them English was mainly spoken in the Lowlands of Scotland, south of the Forth and Clyde Rivers including East Lothian. Robert Burns (1759-1796), affectionately known as Robbie Bums, made Broad Scots popular with his songs and poems, still sung and quoted today wherever Scots gather, Robbie Burns was bom at Alloway, Ayrshire, on the west coast of Scotland. At an early age, he began to write songs and poems in Broad Scots, such as Auld Lang Syne, Flaw Gently Sweet A flan, Ye Banks and Braes, Coming Through the Rye and Seals Wha Hue. Many Scots around the world celebrate Bums' birthday each year on January 25th, at a dinner when a haggis is ceremonially served following a recitation of Bumsâ poem, T a a Haggis. In Ottawa, it was traditional for the Lamb families to attend the annual Bums' Dinner as well as the St, Andrew's Society meeting on November 30th, an evening of Scottish song and dance. In later years, Edith Lamb oï¬en provided the piano accompaniment on these occasions. A framed illustrated grace, in Broad Scots, attributed to Robbie Burns, hung on the dining room wall of three generations of Lambs in Ottawa. It was repeated by several generations of children who did not understand the language but delighted with the sound of the words. Called The Selkirk Grace, it is one of the few graces that remembers the sick, who canna eat, and the hungry who want or have need of food, before oï¬'ering thanks for oneâs own blessings. Some hae meat and mum eat, And some wad eat that want it; but we hae meat, and we can eat, and me the Lord be thankit. Identical Houses Probably sometime in the 18805, the Lamb brothers purchased identical houses on Gilmour Street four doors apart; the J.B. Lambs at 294 and the WA. Lambs at 302. Each house had the same living-room ï¬n'niture and identical green carpets on the ï¬oor. For all, it seemed to be a comfortable arrangement with much visiting back and forth. Visiting Cousins For the Lamb families, summer oï¬en meant travelling to St. Catharines where 104 -------------- --------------- Helen and Maggie's brothers, John and Jamieson, and sister, Jen Black, lived. John had married Magdalene Craise, a cousin, in 1869. They had eight children, six daughters and two sons. The John Blacks lived in a large house on Race Street, next to Robert Lawrie, whom everyone called Grandpa Lawrie, though he was not their grandfather, but a cousin of their mother. All the girls slept in the house while the boys camped out in the back yard. The yard included a large garden which one Lamb cousin recalled with delight, years later, in these words, "The garden was enormous, the raspberries the biggest and the peaches the sweetest than anything Iâve ever seen or tasted in Ottawa.â Jamieson Black married Mary Houston in 1871. They had eleven children, of whom four died in early childhood. One of the daughters, Jean Black (1883-1979), lived to be 96 years of age. In her later years Jean wrote several letters about the Black family. One summer was especially remembered. Uncle Jamieson was bringing a load of grain by boat ï¬om Port Dalhousie to Kingston. The Lamb families were to meet him in Kingston and return by boat across Lake Ontario to Port Dalhousie. At other times, the Black cousins came to Ottawa for extended visits with the Lambs. An Honours Graduate, 1890 Edith Lamb remembered trying to play the piano on her motherâs ironing board at the age of four. Piano lessons followed and later organ lessons. Hours of practice on the organ usually took place in unheated churches which could be very cold in winter. In 1890, Edith graduated with honours in music and was awarded the silver medal ï¬'om the London (England) College of Music which had their own examiners in Canada at that time. The same year, at the age of 20, she became the organist at First Baptist Church in Ottawa, a post she held for some 25 years. About 19â, Edith was appointed organist and choir director at First Congregational Church, where she remained until her retirement in 1935. Over the years she taught piano and organ to numerous Ottawa students. Edith was a talented accompanist playing for many Ottawa music groups, concerts and visiting soloists, often performing in the Russell Theatre. Highlights of each year were the St. Andrews Society events in November and the Burnsâ Day dimers in January when Scottish music was the order of the evening. Edith was known to compose music but her real delight was playing the organ or listening to others perform. In her later years, radio brought operas and symphony orchestras into her home, Edith died in 1955 in her 85th year, a gentle, gracious soul remembered with love. Camping at 110ng Back An adventure long remembered in the Lamb families, was the year the four Lamb boys, Art, Bob, Walter and Billy, went camping at Hogâs Back, a spot where the Rideau Canal and Rideau River meet, then about four miles southwest of the city limits, It was probably in the early 18905, when the boys were in their teens. Helen Black Lamb had a sewing machine on which she fashioned a tent of canvas for the boys. When it was ready, they set it up in the back yard and waterproofed it with linseed oil. Aï¬er several weeks of drying and testing, the tent was ready for use, Excitement rose as they gathered their food and clothes. When all was ready, Art, Bob, 105 -------------- --------------- Walter, Billy and their dog, Paddy, packed their tent, food and clothes, and started out on their great adventure. From Gilmour Street, they walked west to Bank Street and north to Maria/Lauder, where they stopped at a shop to sample and buy bags of broken biscuits to take with them. Then west to Concession /Bronson and south to the Canal Road which took them to Hog's Back. There they set up their campsite. By all accounts, it was an idyllic week of ï¬shing, hiking and swimming. Too soon it was time to return home to Gilmour Street and their waiting families. Itâs in the Faminl You Know Pemicious anemia, a fairly common condition in the 19th century, had an insidious onset, oï¬en beginning with pallor and prematurely greying hair. Once diagnosed, it offered perhaps twenty years of life, complicated with increasing problems of balance and sight and developing weakness and numbness in arms and legs. It seemed to mn in families. The cause and treatment were unknown. The condition gained the name âpernieiousâ because it did not respond to the usual anemia treatment of iron salts. Helen Black Lamb was probably diagnosed with pernicious anemia about 1895, when its effect began to change her familyâs priorities. Her son, Walter, an honour student and dux in classics, leï¬ the Ottawa Collegiate on Lisgar Street before graduation to work at James Hope & Co., a stationery store on Sparks Street. Suddenly, he wanted to make it possible for his parents to travel to Scotland and visit Helen's relatives and childhood home. A few years later, the Laran had a new house built in the Glebe district, "out in the country, for Mother's health." It was the second house built west of Bank Street on Clemow Avenue. About 1900, Helen's sister, Maggie, learned that she, too, had pernicious anemia with perhaps twenty years to live. "It's in the family, you know," was the way family members spoke of it. Pernicious anemia also aifected the next generation. Maggie and Jimâs younger son, Billy, developed it about 1920. However, not long alter, it was discovered that pernicious anemia responded to the eating of raw liver. Later, the factor in raw liver was found to be Vitamin BIZ and an injectable form of the vitamin became the eï¬âective treatment. A Family Vacation at the Devil's Elbow, 1097 On August 15th 1897, the J.B. and WA. Lamb families embarked on on a camping vacation, travelling to Kingston by way of the Rideau Canal. The Volunteer, a steam boat with a glassed-in cabin accommodating 12 to 15 people and its captain, was chartered in Ottawa for the two week period. Twelve people went aboard at the Canal Basin: Jim and Maggie Lamb their sons, Bob and Billy and daughter, Ethel, Willie and Helen Lamb their sons, Art and Walter and daughter, Edith and lastly, Nell Black, a cousin visiting from St, Catharines and Captain Jones. The weather was good with many stops for sightseeing along the way. At night the women slept in the Volunteer's cabin, the men in tents pitched on the shore. Meals were picnic-style, sometimes in the cabin, at other times when the boat was tied up, on a grassy 106 -------------- --------------- knoll. Aï¬er a few days sightseeing in Kingston, they retraced their route through the canal, stopping to camp for a week at a quiet glade on Mud Lake, called the Devilâs Elbow. Many jokes were made about good church folk staying at a place with such a name. A number of photos, probably taken by Art Lamb, and a ioumal written by Jim Lamb, still survive. One photo taken at night at the Devilâs Elbow, shows the group gathered around a large campï¬re. In the journal it is described as a musical evening in which "the bass would roll out strong and grand" and some of the women âwould forget and soar away up into giddy heights of song." Scottish songs were particularly favoured. Most of the campers are pictured with various musical instruments. Edith Lamb, normally a church organist, is playing the mouth organ. The week at the Devilâs Elbow passed quickly. Too soon it was time to pack up and return to Ottawa. On August 30th, the Volunteer and its passengers arrived at the Canal Basin. As the campers made their way home, suddenly the noise and busyness of the city stmck 16-year-old Billy Lamb. He turned to his father and innocently said, "Thereâs more noise here than at the Devilâs Elbow!" Doc Lamb Goes West After graduating from the Ottawa Collegiate on Lisgar Street, Art Lamb worked for several years as a clerk at A. Workman & Co., a hardware store on Rideau Street, saving for university. In 1894, he entered the Faculty of Medicine at McGill University in Montreal. Four years later, in 1898, he graduated with the degree of MD. in surgery and medicine and returned to Ottawa as house surgeon at the Protestant General Hospital, A year at the New York Lying-In Hospital in New York City followed. In 1901, he took a position at Sand Coulee, Montana, ï¬nally settling in the Flathead Valley in northern Montana about 50 miles south of the Canadian border. The Flathead Valley, set amidst the snow-capped Rocky Mountains, was sparsely settled at the tum of the 20th century. Travel was only possible by horseback. The Great Northern Railway between Minneapolis and Seattle crossed through the valley, stopping at Columbia Falls, a lumber center. At ï¬rst, Art had his medical practice in Columbia Falls. In a few years a larger center began to develop in the Flathead valley, some 15 miles to the southwest of Columbia Falls, called Kalispell. It was here that Art ï¬nally settled. In 1909, he married Maud Lovina Talbott (1879-193 I) of Columbia Falls. In Kalispell, they were members of the Episcopal Church where Art sang in the choir. They had one daughter, Josée Helen, born in 1911 who died shortly aï¬er birth In 1942, Art married Ann Pederson (1900-1979), a high school teacher and gifted musician. Over the years , Art or Doc Lamb, as he was affectionately known, was not only a family doctor to the incoming settlers in the Flathead Valley, but a community builder who pioneered many activities, Boy Scouts, the Masonic Order, parks and playgrounds for the children, and in the 19205, along with others, he founded a radio station, KGEZ in Kalispell. He also initiated the building of a local hospital. His personal hobbies were many, including photography and amateur radio with his own ham radio station W7ABT in 107 -------------- --------------- his home. This was the legacy he leï¬ the town when he died in 1944 at the age of seventy years. His gravestone in the Kalispell Cemetery bears these words, His daily prayer, for better understood In acts than words, was simply doing good Twenty-ï¬ve years later, in 1968, while visiting Ann Pederson Lamb in Kalispell, the writer asked a number of local folk if they remembered Doc Lamb. They responded warmly, recalling events of past years. Strangely they all spoke in the present tense as if Doc Lamb was still alive. Such was his impact on Kalispell. "Walter and Billy, Where Have You Been? Weâve Been to London to Visit the Queen. " In the spring of 1902, excitement grew throughout the British Empire as the date of the Coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra on June 26th, approached. In oï¬icial Ottawa, Canadian representatives and a contingent of the Princess Louise Dragoon Guards was preparing to travel to England for the event, In unoï¬icial Ottawa, two young men, Walter Lamb, then 22 years of age, and his cousin, William/Billy Lamb, then 21, made their own plans to attend the Coronation in London. The Ottawa Evening Journal of Monday, May 26th, announced in large letters that âMr.W.T.Lamb and William H.Lamb leï¬ this afternoon for Montreal, whence they will sail for London to enjoy the festivities of the Coronation." In Montreal, they made their way to the harbour looking for ships sailing for England. Finally, they signed on to the passenger ship, the Ionian, replacing two crew who were leï¬ at the quarantine station at Grosse lle with smallpox on its inbound voyage. The Ionian leï¬ Montreal for Liverpool on May 3 1 st. Seasick or not, Walter and Billy had to serve meals to the passengers. There was much scrubbing and cleaning between meals. The Ionian docked in Liverpool on June 9th. Walter and Billy left by train for London. They spent several weeks sightseeing in London and trying to contact some of the ofï¬cers of the Canadian contingent in London, hoping there would be a space for them to join the troops lining the parade route the day of the Coronation. Eventually, they were offered jobs guarding the Canadian Arch at night. Although the exact location of the Canadian Arch is not known, photos show a high, decorated arch, probably built of lumber and decorated with many sheaves of wheat and garlands of evergreens with wings of electric lights. The arch is topped with a decorated cupola below which are these words in large letters, CANADA BRITAIN âS GRANARY God Save Our King & Queen The large decorated pillars on either side of the road supporting the arch, contain 108 -------------- --------------- porches where dignitaries can view the passing procession. Since their nighttime guard duties meant sleeping in the daytime, Walter and Billy seem to have missed the Coronation parade. However, Billy's log notes that they did see King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra earlier in Hyde Park. The King and Queen were returning to London from Windsor and Billy says they received a special bow from the Queen. The Coronation festivities over, Walter and Billy returned to Canada the slow way, on a cattle boat. They ï¬nally docked in Montreal and returned to Ottawa, glad to be home, their adventure over. On their return to the real world, Walter became an agent for the GreatâWest Life Assurance Company in Ottawa. Billy joined the Bank of Nova Scotia, later moving to Grenville, Buckingham and Lachute, all in the lower Ottawa valley. Waning Days In a photo taken in 1912 by her son, Art Lamb, who was visiting ï¬'om his home in Kalispell, Montana, Helen Black Lamb, sitting on the veranda of her Clemow Avenue home with her sister, Maggie, and others, appears very thin and trail, By March 1914, her condition had worsened The family gathered on March 19th to mark Helen's 66th birthday. Art Lamb and his wife, Maud, had arrived from Montana, Helenâs brother, Jamieson Black, and nieces and nephews came from St. Catharines, and other family members from Montreal. Aï¬er 20 years of decreasing vigour, Helen passed away the following day. Her obituary in The Canadian Congregationalist of April 23rd, 1914, describes her passing in these words, 0n the evening of March 201h, with her family about her, Mrs. Lamb entered into rest. Thus sweetly and quietly came the passing of a good and gentle life, whose sweet disposition endeared her to all with whom she came in contact. Mrs, Lamb is faith in her Heavenly Father is well expressed in her favorite quotation: And so beside the silent sea I wait with muï¬led oar. No harm from Him can come to me On ocean or on share, I know not where His islands lift Their fronded palms in air; I only know I cannot mift Beyond His love and care. Her funeral was held at her home. Burial followed beside her two infant sons in Beechwood Cemetery. 109 -------------- --------------- Lengthening Shadows As the years passed, Maggie Black Lambâs health began deteriorating as a result of pernicious anemia. In 1917 she was no longer able to provide communion care, providing the elements for communion services at the church, a task she had faithfully carried out for many years. On November 25th, 1919, Maggie died at her Gilmour Street home at the age of 68 years, her family gathered round. Aï¬er services at her home, she was buried in Beechwood cemetery. Jim continued to work until his retirement in 1921 at 80 years of age. Two years later, Jim died on March 13th, 1923, aï¬er a short illness. His funeral was at his home followed by burial in Beechwood Cemetery. An obituary in the Ottawa Citizen of March 14th, 1923, recalls his lifetime accomplishments: 7he deceased developed a genius for aâraughting and designing and was associated with his father in setting up many of the small mills then being built around Ottawa. He was a vetenm of the Fenian Raid in 1866 and served with the 3rd Ottawa Regiment at Cornwall during that period In 1873, the late Mr lamb was appointed to the chief architect is branch of the public works department and after 48 years service, was superannuated in 1921. He was a lifelong deacon of First Congregational Church and an earnest worker in all branches of church life. Jim was survived by his daughter, Ethel, living at home, two sons, Robert/Bob Lawrie Lamb, an accountant in Montreal, his daughter-in-law, Grace Grant Lamb, two yanddaughters, Jane and Susan Lamb, and William/Billy Herbert Lamb, a bank manager in Buckingham, his daughter-inâlaw, Jessie Christie Lamb, a granddaughter, Rosamond Lamb, and a grandson, George Christie Lamb, two brothers, Willie Lamb, of Ottawa, and Herk Lamb, of Vancouver, and a sister, Minnie Lamb Porter, of Boston. Changing Circumstances About 1923 the Lamb's Clemow Avenue house was sold. Willie, Edith and Waiter moved to 110-112 Carling Avenue, a large, double house just east of Bank Street, which they converted into four apartments. They lived in one of the larger apartments at 110 Carling Avenue and rented the other three, This would provide Willie with retirement income, Shortly alter Jim Lamb died in 1923, the Gilmour Street house was sold and Ethel came to live with her Uncle Willie and cousins, Edith and Walter Lamb. Edith and Ethel were both talented in various arts and craï¬s, taking orders for all sorts of painted and embroidered items which they sold to raise money for the church. One upstairs bedroom was like a small eraï¬ studio. In 1925, Walter, an insurance agent with Great-West Assurance Company, married Eva Gervan whom he had known for many years and whose family were long-time members of First Congregational Church. After their wedding they moved into their own apartment. Their three children were Helen, born in 1926, Walter/Bud, born in 1928 and William/Bill born in 1930. 110 -------------- --------------- Sometime about 1928 Herk Lamb arrived from Vancouver, sick and penniless. He lived with Willie, Edith and Ethel at 110 Carling Avenue. A few years later, Ethel leï¬ for the weekend to visit her Black cousins in St Catharines, or so her Ottawa family thought. On Sunday, she telephoned ï¬om St. Catharines to say that she had been married to an old friend, a widower and lawyer, Alexander/Al William Marquis (1862-1940). Ethel moved to St Catharines where she died in 1951. Her remains were placed in the Marquis vault in the mausoleum at Victoria Lawn Cemetery, St. Catharines. Bethlehem Bells Born in 1843, Willie Lamb had seen in his lifetime the advent of steamboat, railway, streetcar, automobile and airplane travel, electricity in all its forms, central heating, telephone and telegraph communication, and now radio. A big battery radio, acquired in 1931, sat on a table in the livingroom. Willie wasn't very impressed with this box with dials that produced so much static. Edith kept saying, "Just wait âtil Christmas." Christmas Day arrived and the family gathered around the radio in the livingroom, waiting. Suddenly there was a clear peal of bells ringing out Christmas tidings. When the announcer said the bells were ringing in Bethlehem, Willie couldn't believe his ears. From Bethlehem! On Christmas Day! Ringing in his house! For Willie, this was the highlight of Christmas 1931. In his mind all the other inventions in his lifetime paled in comparison with the sound of the bells of Bethlehem ringing out the Good News of Christmas. A Special Birthday The year 1932, brought many anxieties as the economic depression of the 19305, deepened. It was decided that Willie and Edith would move to Walter and Evaâs larger house at 174 Carling Avenue so that their apartment could be rented. It was here that Willie, still in good health, celebrated his 90th birthday a year later on September 17th, 1933. Art came ï¬'om his home in Montana for the occasion, bringing his camera for the birthday photo. The minister of the church, Rev, G,B. McLerman, brought greetings on behalf of the Session and congregation. Birthday cards, telegrams and letters arrived ï¬'om near and far. Willie had lived longer than anyone else in his family. The Last Ten Days In early January of 1935, Willie attended Sunday morning worship as was his custom, sitting in his usual pew. That evening, while Edith was at church playing the organ for the evening service, Willie suffered a severe stroke leaving him unconscious and partially paralysed. Ten days later he died peacefully on January 30th, in his 92nd year. Rev. GB. McLennan conducted his lirneral, remembering Willie with these words, We Shall miss those bright eyes, that kindling smile, that sweet blithe countenance, that sense of humour. His years were noted not so much by the failing of the physical as by the growth of the spirit in grace. lll -------------- --------------- Burial took place in Beechwood Cemetery where the JB. Lambs and the WA. Lambs had chosen adjoining graves. The large gravestones of grey granite, almost identical, stand side by side. In life these brothersâ and sistersâ lives were intertwined; in death they are not apart. The End ofa Gena-adorn Within eighteen months Willieâs brother, Herk, and sister, Minnie, also passed on. Herk Lamb died in Ottawa on April let, 1936 in his 86th year, and Minnie Lamb Porter died in Boston on June 30th, 1936 in her 88th year; the last of the children of John Lamb and Mary Dewar. In the let century, there are a few Lamb descendants still living along the shores of the Lower Ottawa. Some live in the cities of Montreal and Ottawa; some in other parts of Ontario. Most have irrigated to western Canada and the United States. For over a century James Lamb and his family lived along the Ottawa River where they cleared the land for farming and built churches, Gradually the next generation who leï¬ the Ottawa Valley took their farming slcills and knowledge of lumbering to their new homes where they contributed to the building of many communities. Today, Lamb descendants are scattered across the continent. artarttahtaar 112 -------------- --------------- A FAMIL Y ALBUM Descendants of James Lamb & Elizabeth McFarlane The original photos from Lamb descendants' collections have been re- phmographed and enlarged or reduced In 512.6 fat this album There Is no known photo oflohn S Edwards (1805-1868) Marv Dewar Lamb c 1885 James & Sarah Baker Lamb 9 1000. John Lamb c 1885, -------------- --------------- Am Lamb Gordon c 1855 Helen Lamb Edwards 0 1865 Margaret Gordon Lamb 5 $870 Wllham Lamb 0 1870 -------------- --------------- Margaret Lamb McLeah 4 $880 {ohm McLean c {880 Alex McLean c 1000 Janet 2.9va McLean c 1880 HS -------------- --------------- Lefl - W.A. Lamb famlly c. 1900. L to R. - Helen Black Lamb, Walter, Edith, Art & W A./Willie Lamb Below - Lamb gathering on Willie's 85"â birthday, Sept 17, 1928. L. to R . Back - W H /Billy Lamb, Edith, Maud, Wlllie holdmg Bud, Helen & Eva Front â Rosamond, Jessie, George & Walter Phom byArI Lamb -------------- --------------- Chart #3 - Family of James Lamb and Elizabeth McFarlane 1 James Lamb b: 1733 d: 1355 G c j aï¬: +Elizabeth McFarlane b: 1783 m 1809 d: 1852 ' . 2 JohnLamb b: 1809 d:1895 â +MaryDewar b: 1811 m: 1835 d: 1886 Elizabeth Lamb b: 1811 d. Unknown Helen Lamb b: 1813 d 1883 V +John Simpson Edwards b: 1805 m: 1834 d. 1868 William Lamb b: 1815 d: 1894 +Margaret Gordon b' 1827 m: Abt. 1854 dâ 1911 AnnLamb b: 1817 d 1855 V +Alexander Gordon b. 1824 m: 1854 d: 1915 Margaret Lamb b: 1820 d: 1901 1 +John McLean b 1820 m: Abt 1848 d: 1900 Janet Lamb b, 1824 d 1883 .. ,. . +AlexanderMcLean b: 1824 m: 1854 d: 1906 _ f 2 James Lamb b: 1828 d: 1914 c» '5/â . . . . +SarahAnnBaker b: 1835 m 1855 d. 1914 Elizabeth Lamb, born in 181 1, died in Scotland . See also Family Charts #4 - #10 for each ofthe other children. Chart #4 - Family of John Lamb & Mary Dewar 2 John Lamb b 1809 d: 1895 +Mary Dewar b 1811 m: 1835 d: 1886 . 3 Elizabeth Jane Lamb b. 1836 d: 1868 +Thomas Gallagher b: 1819 m: 1858 d: 1882 .. . 4 Henrietta/Hetlie Gallagher bâ 1859 d: 1924 V . +Thomas Birkett b' 1844 m 1904 d: 1920 1 ,,,, 1, 4 ElizabethmibbyAnn Gallagher b: 1861 d. 1921 +Frank H. Till m. 1894 5 Bernice Elizabeth Till bâ 1895 d: 1974 V .. +Edward G Warnock b: 1897 d: 1966 5 Frank Lawrence Till b, 1899 d: 1966 . . . . . .. +MargaretE1Willmott b: 1906 m: 1929 d: 1965 . 4 Mary Eleanor Gallagher b' 1863 d: 1864 ,. 4 Thomas Lincoln Gallagher b: 1865 d: 1944 . H r. +AliceM, Squarey m: 1897 d 1954 3 Catherine/Kate Lamb b' 1838 dâ 1908 +chhard John Rodden b 1836 m 1861 dâ 1899 117 -------------- --------------- Ida Amelia Rodden b: 1864 d: 1940 William/Billie Thomas Rodden b' 1865 d: 1946 .. +Louise Gallagher Francis/Frank Alexander Rodden b: 1867 d' 1923 .. .7 +Mar1'e Mackay b: 1882 d: 1953 ,,,,,,, .7 5 -- (son) â~ Rodden b: 1916 d: 1916 . 4 Minnie HelenRodden b' 1870 d: 1931 . +William/Billie Lyall Helen Lyall Charles Edward Lyall 7 +Pearl Topping Edna Lyall . +Gaston Debuc Peter Lyall 7. +Edna Elcome Catherine Lyall . +Keirh Notman Richard Montgomery/Monty Rodden b: 1871 d 1965 . +Julia Grace Brown d' 1978 Ruby Catherine/Puss Rodden b: 1873 d: 1959 . +William/Billie J7 Walker 7.7. .7 . .7 5 FrancesWalker . 4 Veronica/Onie Rodden b' 1875 d. 1951 .7 . . Hesse Folsom Johnson . 3 James/Jim Byrne Lamb b' 1841 d 1923 +Magda1ene/Maggie Bone Black b 1851 m, 1873 d 1919 4 Ruben/Bob Lawrie Lamb 1) 1875 d' 1935 +GraceG Grant b: 1875 m: 1903 d, 1958 . 5 Helen Grace Lamb b: 1904 +Robert L. Craik 7 7 6 Jane Craik 6 Susan Craik Margaret Ethel Lamb b: 1905 d: 1970 7 +Geurge Arthur Wardrope 7 7 6 Murray Grant Wardrope b. 1943 . 7 . 7 . 77 +Delia Ann Doucette . 7 Laurie Heather Wardrope 7 7 Darrel Grant Wardrope 6 Heather Lawrie Wardrope b: 1946 +Joseph Daniel McGillivray 7 Sean David McGillivray 4 Ethel Florence Lamb b: 1877 d: 1951 ..... .7 +AJexander/Al W. Marquis b: 1862 m: Abt. 1930 d. 1940 4 William/Billy Herbert Lamb b: 1881 d: 1959 +Jessie Murray Christie [3: 1884 d' 1944 5 Rosamond Anna Herbert Lamb b: 1912 d. 1980 118 -------------- --------------- 5 William George Christie Lamb b: 1917 +Dorothy E. Wells b: 1922 m: 1948 ,. 6 KathrynE, Lamb b: 1950 . . _ . . . . . . . 6 Judith Anna Lamb b: 1952 6 William James Christie Lamb b: 1953 . +Tracey Stephen m: 1986 : . : . 7 BrendanGeorge StephenLamb b: 1988 : . .. . 3 William/Willie Alexan er Lamb b: 1843 d: 1935 +Helen Lawrie Black b: 1848 m. 1868 d. 1914 4 Edith Helen Lamb b: 1870 d: 1955 . 4 William Herbert Lamb b: 1872 d: 1875 4 John Arthur/Art Lamb b: 1874 d: 1944 +Maud Lovina Talbott b: 1879 m: 1909 d: 1931 .... 5 Josée HelenLamb b: 1911 d: 1911 . : *an Wife of John Arthur/Art Lamb: . . . . . . +Ann Pederson b: 1900 m: 1942 d: 1979 . 4 Charles Kirkwood Lamb b: 1876 d: 1876 4 Walter James Thornton Lamb b: 1878 d: 1960 +Katharine Eva May Gervan b: 1886 m: 1925 d: 1958 5 Edith Helen Thornton Lamb b: 1926 . +John Leigh Stewart Shearman b: 1926 m: 1951 . . . . . . : 6 David Keith Shearman b: 1954 . +Janet Wight m: 1976 , ., 7 Bradley Jason Shearman b: 1982 . . 7 Christopher Michael Shearman b' 1984 : : *an Wife ofDavid Keith Shearman: . . . . . +Carol Merton rn 1989 . . 7 Angela Ann Shearman b: 1992 . . .: 7 Jessica James Shearman b: 1994 :. 6 Mary Diane Shearman b: 1957 : +Wallace/Wally James Syme b: 1951 m: 1983 1, : 7 Malcolm Andrew Syme b: 1986 7 Candice Joanne Syme b: 1990 ,,........, , 7 AmberHope Syme b: 1998 . . 5 Walter/Bud Arthur Thornton Lamb b: 1928 d: 1977 . .. +SheilaB, Convery b: 1930 m: 1953 . : 6 Jeffrey ConveryLamb b: 1954 . +Patricia/Trisha Simpson 6 Walter Thomas/Tom Lamb b: 1957 : +LoniConor . 7 Matthew Austin Lamb b: 1981 . . 7 Stacey Conor Lamb b' 1983 6 Phyllis Kathryn/Kathy Helen Lamb b: 1964 : +Steven Hughes . . . . ., 7 Michael Hughes b: 1991 : . . . .: . 7 Shaun Hughes b: 1993 119 -------------- --------------- 5 John William/Bill Thornton Lamb b' 1930 +Gina Elise Baker m: 1961 6 Susan Alexandra/Sandra Lamb b: 1965 . +Christopher/Chris Ifechuku Oneymenam b: 1966 m: 2000 7 Obinna/Obi Christopher Colton Onyemenam b 1998 . . .. . . V 7 Ifechuku/Ife Justen Onyemenam b' 2000 ..... ,. 3 MaryLamh b: 1846 d' 1847 . 3 Mary/Minnie Ann Lamb b: 1848 d: 1936 . +Th0mas Porter b: 1848 m: 1872 d: 1922 4 William Alï¬'ed Porter bâ 1873 d: 1874 . 4 Minnie Maud Poner b: 1874 d: 1959 +Wa1ter Albert Beekert b: 1875 m: 1901 d: 1947 . 5 Doris Maud Beckert b: 1904 d: 1984 : +Charles Edward Kidner b: 1904 m: 1929 d: 1988 6 Charles Edward Kidner b: 1931 6 Joan Emily Kidner b: 1934 : +Charles Fritz Marigold bâ 1935 m' 1956 . 7 Linda Marigold b: 1958 : +Bruce Mounce m: 1989 V . 8 Emily Alis Mounce b. 1992 .......... .. 8 Patrick Charles Mounce b: 1992 6 ar yPorter b: 1877 d. 1946 4 Thomas Percival Porter b' 1880 dâ 1953 . 4 Avelyn Alice Porter b: 1883 d: 1959 +Charles Ewen b 1882 In: 1914 d: 1945 . V . V . . . .. 5 Jean Lorna Avelyn Ewen b: 1916 +David Henderson Gervan b, 1911 m: 1939 d; 1995 ââââââ ., 6 Suzanne Jean Gervan b: 1941 . +Nonnan HanwellMacoy b: 1936 m: 1962 . 7 Ian Wilson Macoy b: 1963 +Stephanie Sprouse b: 1966 m: 1991 . 7 David Earle Macoy b: 1965 . V V . . .: +Kristen Lynn Gebhardt b. 1967 mâ 1990 . . 4 Bernice Marion Porter b: 1892 d: 1980 3 John Herons/Herk Lamb 13 1850 d 1936 Chart #5 - Family of Helen Lamb and John Simpson Edwards 2 HelenLamb b. 1813 d: 1883 Hahn/Some: Simpson Edwards b: 1805 m: 1834 d: 1868 3 James Simpson Edwards b: 1835 d: 1920 +Catherine Roe b, 1835 d, 1872 120 -------------- --------------- 4 John Edwards b: 1860 +Jessie ---- 5 Allan Edwards . 4 George Arthur Edwards b: 1362 d: 1940 +Ange1ina McRae b: 1869 m, 1890 d: 1960 .V John James Edwards b 1891 d: 1978 William Charles Edwards b: 1893 d: 1946 Ellen/Ella Edwards 1): 1894 Alva George Edwards 13: 1896 d: 1957 +EthelMcFarlane b: 1897 d: 1979 Ethel Catherine Edwards 12: 1900 Mabel May Edwards b: 1903 d: 1970 Douglas Edwards b: 1905 d: 1975 +Myrtle Meneer b. 1913 . 5 Abram Edwards bâ 1910 1 +AnneKester b: 1911 m. 1949 4 MaryAnnEdwards b: 1864 +Alva Cameron 5 Gordon Cameron .â +Ethel Cook 1 6 Jewel Cameron 6 Geraldine Cameron 6 Ross Cameron 6 Clive Cameron Clarence Cameron +Agnes Davidson . ........ .. 6 Betty Cameron V 6 Jean Cameron 6 Helen Cameron 1. 6 Clarence Cameron 6 Harry Cameron Helen Edwards b: 1867 d 1954 V +Anthony Hollingshead b: 1861 m' 1894 d, 1929 . 5 James Hollingshead d: 1958 V +Victoria Bailey m. 1927 6 Donald Hollingshead 6 Jean Hollingshead 6 James Hollingshead 6 David Hollingshead V 5 Elizabeth Hollingshead +Roben Sandell m: 1928 ,. 6 Gerald Sandell . . .V 6 Hazel Helen Sandell V .... ,. 5 Mary Helen Hollingshead +Harold Hammer m: 1944 . 6 Mary Hammer 121 -------------- --------------- 5 Hazel Ann Hollingshead . +Carl Simonson m. 1940 . 6 CarlSimonson +Joyce ------- -- . 6 Seigrid Simonson +Jan Brown 4 Elizabeth Margaret Edwards b: 1869 . +Tâhomas Meredith . 5 Elmer Meredith 5 Edwin Meredith V 5 Fred Meredith 5 Howard Meredith 5 Carrie Meredith , + ------ -- Hutton H 5 Gertrude Meredith 4 Catherine/Katie Edwards b. 1871 d: 1931 +James G. Sell b: 1867 d 1955 .. V 5 Fred Sell (died in infancy) . *an Wife of James Simpson Edwardsâ V. +Margaret Johnson Rose b: 1840 m 1872 d: 1919 , 4 Ida Edwards . +Anthony Fry , 5 Regoma Fry 5 Nelson Fry 5 Leita Fry ..... H - Gillis V 5 Maurice Fry 4 Alice Edwards +Thomas Hopkins 5 Marjorie Hopkins 5 Lyle Hoplo'ns V. 5 Perry Hopkins William Edwards . +Ida Snyder , 5 Gordon Edwards ., ,1 +Ethe1â-- - 5 Harold Edwards ,. +Theresa --------- 5 James Edwards . ., . V . 5 LillianEdwards â *an Wife of William Edwards. .......... .. +Nan ---«»â-- 3 Alexander Simpson Edwards b: 1837 d. 1916 +Elizabeth/Eliza AnnRoe b: 1843 m: 1868 d: 1914 .... ., 4 Joseph Alexander Edwards b: 1870 d: 1959 *Anne/Annie Cameron 1:: 1874 m' 1915 d: 1958 122 -------------- --------------- . 4 Albert George Edwards b: 1872 d: 1932 . +Norma McGregor Campbell b. 1868 m: 1905 d: 1952 William Hatton Edwards b: 1874 d: 1930 . +Ida Esther Parr b: 1877 m: 1904 d: 1952 Janet Lamb Edwards 13: 1876 d: 1944 Mary/Minnie Ellen Edwards 1): 1878 d 1967 : +Lyman James Thomson b: 1879 m: 1904 d: 1964 : : 5 Loyal Alexander Thomson b: 1909 d: 1999 +01ive Mary Marks b: 1911 m' 1947 d: 1989 ., 6 Rosalie Sandra Thomson b: 1949 : +Gordon Robert Cheriton b: 1948 m: 1970 7 Suzanne Elizabeth Cheriton b' 1975 . . . . .. 7 Sean Christopher Cheriton b: 1977 6 Alexander James Thomson b: 1950 d: 2000 . +BarbaraAnnPurdy b: 1950 m: 1976 7 Rhonda Helen Thomson b: 1978 ........ .. 8 Jeï¬ârey Michael Thomson b 1999 .. ,. . 7 Sarah Anne Thomson 1): 1986 . . 5 Helen Clementia Thomson b 1910 d: 1992 +Charles Hardie b: 1901 d: 1942 .: V 6 Helen Elizabeth Hardie b: 1939 , +A1fred Ronnebo Rasmussen-Waymann M b; 1938 7 Eric Charles Rasmussen-Waymann ** b' 1961 7 Ian Tor Rasmussen-Waymann ** b: 1963 +Anita Lagler m: 1992 7 Karen Lynn Rasmussen-Waymann ** bâ 1964 +Roben Dean Dunlop b: 1963 m: 1991 8 Elizabeth Ann Dunlop b: 1993 V . .: 8 Sarah Alexandra Dunlop b: 1996 . *an Husband of Helen Clementia Thomson: : ,1 H H +Clarence Dixon b: 1906 m' 1971 d: 1995 . 4 Ethel Georgina Edwards b: 1882 d: 1932 . +Charles McKenzie b: 1880 m: 1922 d: 1957 V 4 Sarah Rerdwards b: 1886 d: 1979 +Edmund Church b: 1888 m: 1917 d: 1958 . 5 Howard Edwards Church b: 1918 ,,,,,,,,,,,,, :. +Margaret Olive Sibbald b: 1922 m: 1944 6 Leonard Allen Church bâ 1946 +Sharon RuthâMarie Bellows b 1945 m: 1973 . ., 7 Treena Marie Church b: 1976 . 7 Timothy Mark Church I): 1979 ., 7 Matthew David Church b: 1981 . 6 Linda Margaret Church b' 1948 +Carmen Richard Loberg b 1950 m: 1980 . . 6 Andrew James Church b- 1950 +Bever1y Eleanor Ells b: 1950 m 1972 123 -------------- --------------- V . . . . . 7 Jermey Andrew Church b. 1975 V V 7 Alanna Beth Church b: 1982 V . .V 7 Kayla Ells Church 11: 1990 . . . . . . V . . 5 Leonard Campbell Church b: 1920 d: 1987 . â +Joyce Vernell Lindberg b: 1926 m: 1950 . 6 CarolRoe Church b: 1952 , +Bruce Kenneth Malmas b: 1949 m: 1974 . . 7 Shamin Erin Malmas b: 1984 .. 7 Sean IanMalmas b: 1986 .. . 6 Rodney Campbell Church b: 1955 . +Joanne Carol Schneider 1): 1959 m: 1980 7 Tara Lynne Church I): 1982 V V 7 Stephanie Leah Church b: 1983 6 Martha Lynne Church b: 1964 V +David Joseph Zimmer b: 1961 . r 7 Amanda Lynne Zimmer b. 1984 7 Shauna Ann Zimmer b: 1986 7 Sarah Marie Zirnmer b: 1990 . . V . ., 7 Larissa Rachel Zimmer b: 1992 6 Ann Vernell Church b: 1966 V +Leslie Cliï¬ord Carey b: 1964 .. . 7 Corbin Leslie Carey b: 1991 . . . V .. 7 Alex Campbell Carey 13' 1994 . 5 Stuart Roe Church b, 1923 .. 7 . ., .. +DorothyLorrainePanlow b: 1929 m: 1951 . . . V . . .. 6 Donald Stuart Church b: 1952 . . +Wendy Nickel .. 7 . 7 Donald Paul Church b: 1978 . . . . . . . 2nd Wife of Donald Stuart Church: . . , +Sandra Lynn Davidson Bill . 6 Kathryn Lorraine Church b: 1954 , +Ross Eric Gray b: 1955 m: 1975 6 Brian Douglas Church b' 1958 ,. +Lori Anne Wood Lotzien b: 1962 7 Brian Eli Church b: 1991 .. . .7. 7 Eric Stuart Church b: 1993 6 Robert Edward Church b' 1961 +Margaret Cornelia Colyn b. 1961 m. 1982 7 Wade Brent Church b: 1990 . ..... 7 Sarah Corey Church b: 1994 5 Albert Joseph Church b: 1924 . +Margery Leone Knaut b: 1927 m: 1950 ., 6 Murray Albert Church b: 1954 +Gail Patricia Amundsen b: 1960 . .. . 7 Dawson James Church b: 1993 . . 7 Hailey Leone Church b' 1995 124 -------------- --------------- . 6 Alan Edmund Church b 1955 6 David Brent Church b: 1957 . +Wendy JoâAnne Welsh b: 1954 7 Tami Jo Church b'1971 . 7 John Devon Church 1:: 1980 , 7 Tiffany Dawne Church b: 1983 7 Daniel Matthew Church b: 1987 6 Robert Laurier Church b: 1959 5 Jamel Rachel Church b: 1927 . +Lawrence Richard Monson b: 1921 m: 1948 6 Ronald Brian Monson b: 1948 +E|eanor Moberly 7 April Rose Monson b. 1973 . 7 Jocelyn Joan Morison b: 1974 d: 1992 7 Robert Monson b: 1976 7 Clinton Collinston Monson b: 1978 . 6 Marylyn Dawn Manson bâ 1949 d: 1949 1 . 6 Wendy Lorraine Manson b' 1952 . . . . 1 V . +1-1enry Marvin Thiessen b: 1935 m: 1972 . 7 Michael James Thiessen b: 1974 .. 7 Cunis Andrew Thjessen b 1975 . 7 Andrea Michele Thiessen b. 1978 . V .: 7 Laurie Lynn Thiessen b, 1990 . 6 Elaine Hanley Monson b: 1953 . +Lynette Rachel Wooten b 1959 . 7 Felicia Dawn Monson b: 1979 . . 7 Holly Lynn Manson b: 1981 7 Ryan Andrew Monson b. 1983 . 6 Serena Lynn Monson b: 1955 +Gordon Henry Neufeld b: 1952 m: 1974 :. . 7 Jennifer Lynn Neufeld b: 1977 7 Cameron Gordon Neufeld b. 1979 7 Corryn Rachelle Neufeld b' 1982 3 John Simpson Edwards 12: 1840 d: 1920 ,,,, ,. 3 Margaret/Maggie Edwards b, 1843 d' 1903 3 William W. Edwards bâ 1847 d' 1886 ., V . : +Mary Jane Henderson m' 1883 .... .. 3 George Edwards 1!: 1853 . +Sadie ~--- . V 4 Grace Victoria Edwards b: 1896 ** This family uses the name of Waymann. 125 -------------- --------------- Chart # 6 - Family of William Lamb and Margaret Gordon 2 William Lamb b: 1815 d: 1894 : +Margaret Gordon b: 1827 m' Abt 1855 d: 1911 ...... .. 3 William/Willie Lamb b: 1856 d: 1927 , +Amelia/Bell Edgar b' 1858 d: 1925 .. 4 FrarikLamb 3 John Alexander Lamb b: 1858 d: 1929 : 3 Elizabeth M, Lamb b: 1860 d: 1863 3 James/Jim Dewar Lamb b: 1862 +Genrude/Genie -v--v---- . 4 Willie Lamb d: Bet 1914-1918 4 Jean Lamb d: 1976 3 Gordon Lincoln Lamb b: 1865 d: 1950 . +Elizabeth/Lizzie May Jackson 17. 1872 m: 1895 d' 1946 4 Gordon Arundel Lamb 1;: 1898 d' 1967 Hennie Evelina Wideman b: 1902 mâ 1932 d: 1983 : 5 Allan Gordon Lamb bâ 1934 , +Marie/Claire Philiben b. 1929 m' 1958 6 Gordon Richard Lamb b: 1959 .. +Gineï¬e Vaillancourt b: 1961 m 1979 . . . . . 6 Philip Joseph Lamb b' 1963 . +Karyn Elizabeth Monk b: 1960 m' 1991 6 Mary Helen Lamb bâ 1964 +Samuel Bishop m: 1987 . .. . 6 Monique/Sim Lillian Lamb b: 1968 4 umce MayLamb b' 1901 dâ 1986 4 Arnold Toynbee Lamb b. 1904 d: 1988 :. +Annie M. Kennedy b' 1901 m: 1927 d: 1966 . 5 Laura Elaine Lamb b: 1928 .: +Rean Herbert Collins b: 1929 m: 1950 ...... .: 6 Laura Annie Collins b: 1970 . ï¬ames Daniel Gyomory b: 1967 m: 1989 : ., 7 Daniel James Gyomory b: 1991 . 7 Matthew Shawn Gyomory b: 1993 . .: 7 Austin Blayne Gyomory b: 1999 . 5 Rut eone Lamb b' 1931 +William/Bill Franklin Robertson b: 1933 m: 1952 ........ .. 6 Norman Bruce Robertson b: 1954 +Dale Lynn Oke b: 1956 m: 1979 7 Erica Lynn Robertson b: 1981 7 Ashley Marie Robertson b. 1984 6 Judith/Judy Anne Robertson b: 1956 +William Gordon Alton b. 1955 m: 1974 . 7 Shawn William Alton b: 1976 126 -------------- --------------- *2nd Husband of Judith/Judy Anne Robertson +Les1ie Robert Turner b: 1951 m: 1983 7 Christopher Thomas Turner b: 1983 6 William Brian Robertson b: 1962 . 6 Robert/Bob James Robertson b: 1965 +Deborah/Debbie Anne Austin b: 1963 m: 1989 . 7 Curtis James Robertson b: 1990 . 7 Courtney Nicole Robertson b' 1994 5 John Arnold Lamb b: 1932 ,: +Joanne McCullough b: 1935 m: 1956 ..: . 6 Gerald Clayton Lamb b: 1956 ., 6 Glenda Joanne Lamb b: 1959 +Harry Talbot b: 1956 m: 1983 7 Katherine/Katie Joanne Talbot b: 1997 . 6 Jean Elizabeth Lamb b: 1964 . +Jeffrey/Jeï¬â Cameron Leitch b: 1963 m: 1993 7 Jason Daniel Leitch b 1995 7 Justin Darren Leitch b: 1999 . Joan Marie Lamb b: 1967 :.., . 6 JillAnnLamb b: 1972 5 Donald James Lamb b: 1933 . +Mary Jane McCullough b: 1937 m: 1958 6 Beverly Jane Lamb b 1962 1 6 Donald Paul Lamb b, 1964 +Bever1y Ann Dalton b: 1964 m: 1988 7 Matthew Paul Lamb b: 1989 7 Adam Donald Douglas Lamb b: 1991 . 7 Zachmmece Lamb b: 1994 : 6 Glen Edward Lamb b. 1966 +PattiRean b: 1968 m: 1992 .. 7 Sierra Rose Lamb b: 1993 . . 7 Carson James Edward Lamb b: 1995 : V. . 7 Rylan Toynbee Lamb b: 1997 , : 6 Steven James Lamb b: 1969 . +Annette Gruendler b: 1971 m' 1993 7 Megan Marie Lamb b: 1995 . 7 Brandon Steven Lamb b: 1999 ,. 5 Helen Doreen Lamb b: 1934 : +Bill Rose 111. 1957 6 William Alan Garner (né Rose) b: 1959 +Wendy Gardner b: 1957 m: 1980 . . 7 Jennifer Lynn Gamer b: 1978 7 Michelle Nicole Gamer b: 1981 7 William/Willie Alan Kane Logan-Garner b: 1993 127 -------------- --------------- V ............... V. *2nd Husband of Helen Doreen Lamb: . +Wi111amGamer b: 1929 m: 1966 d 1975 . 6 Patrick James Garner b: 1968 . +Terry Newton b: 1966 V 7 Jordan Patrick Newton-Gamer b: 1990 * 1 st Wife of Patrick James Gamer: +Christine Diane Borland b: 1971 m: 1996 7 Abigail Marie Garner b: 1998 V *3rd Husband of Helen Doreen Lamb: . +Troy Black m: 1987 . . .. 5 Robert Bruce Lamb b: 1949 d: 1971 *2nd Wife of Amold Toynbee Lamb: +Violet Wyman b: 1916 m: 1972 V 4 John Ewart Grenfell Lamb b: 1907 d: 1915 4 Helen Margaret Elizabeth Lamb b: 1907 d: 1907 3 He1en/Ne11 Mary Lamb b: 1867 d: 1930 L] V 7 +FredCharles Blair b 1874 m: 1992 d: 125% 8-5 i 5,, Chart #7 - Family of Ann Lamb andAlexander Gordan - AnnLamb b' 1817 d 1855 +A1exander Gordon b 1824 d; 1915 m. 1854 3 BabyGordon b 1855 d 1855 Chart #8 - Family ofMurgaret Lamb and John McLean u John McLean b. 1820 d: 1900 +Margaret Lamb b. 1820 m. Abt 1848 d: 1901 .... 3 Elizabeth EV McLean b: 1849 . +Henry Warner 4 William Warner V V . . 4 John Douglas Warner . . . . . . . . . ., 4 George Warner 3 Donald H McLean b: 1851 d: 1924 +Emma Alford b: 1867 d. 1891 4 John Allan McLean , +_ V 5 Donald McLean 4 Ben McLean 128 -------------- --------------- ............... .. 4 Percy Alexander McLean 3 James Lamb McLean b' 1853 d. 1934 +Margaret/Maggie Henderson b: 1859 d: 1933 . . 4 Sproule McLean . +Margaret Robb . . .. .V ....... V. 5 Marion McLean . 3 William McLean b: 1855 +Alice Edison d: 1903 4 Olive Ethel McLean +W ------ -- Saddler JanetJJennieAnnMcLean b 1858 d 1924 +Jacob Vincent/Vince PoapsM b: 1854 m: 1877 d: 1922 . .. .V 4 Janet/Jenny Poaps b: 1878 . ,, 4 Wilfred/Wilf Vincent Poaps b. 1880 d: 1948 V. +Elâï¬e May Wallace . ,,,, .. 5 Peter Allan Poaps b 1921 +Edith Irene Bush m: 1949 V 5 James Vincent Poaps b: 1925 V +Mary Elizabeth Scott in. 1949 . . . . . V . . . 5 Patricia Sarah Poaps be 1928 4 Percival/Percy McLean Poaps b: 1882 d: 1949 . +Lois Mary Hovey b. 1894 m' 1917 d: 1977 , 5 Donald Poaps , 5 Phillip M Poaps 5 John Edward Poaps . 5 Richard Poaps . 4 Jean Ellice Poaps b: 1884 +John Grant Jackson m: 1912 . . . 5 John Grant Jackson . . . . V . V . . . , . 5 Jean Jackson . . 5 Betty Jackson . . . V . . . . , , r 5 Barbara AnnJackson â V . .. 4 Florence/Flora Margaret Poaps b: 1890 , +Stanley Murray ,1 5 JoanMurray 4 John Douglas Poaps b: 1898 d: 1979 . +Jessie May Gautier , *an Wife of John Douglas Poaps: V +Florence Frances Johnston b: 1899 d' 1987 ... . .. 5 Douglas J, Poaps . 3 George A. McLean b: 1859 d: 1902 +Annie Haines b: 1862 d' 1935 .. . .. 4 Bertha McLean b: 1893 d: 1983 4 Eva Lucy McLean b: 1895 d: 1993 4 JennieB McLean b: 1900 d: 1900 129 -------------- --------------- 3 Flora MY McLean b 1862 . +Wilson Thompson 3 JohnMcLean b: 1865 . +Christine Trunneur . ....... ,1 4 Marion Margaret McLean .................... V. +George Wilcox ** Family surname has been spelled Poapst Chart #9 - Family of Janet Lamb and Alwamder McLean 2 Janet Lamb b: 1824 d: 1883 . +Alexander McLean b' 1824 m: 1854 d: 1906 .... i. 3 ElizabethAnnMcLean bâ 1856 .. . +Henry Bymes , 3 Janet Lamb McLean b: 1858 d 1928 +PeterMcDona1d b: 1857 m: 1884 d: 1899 . 4 Norman McDonald b 1885 d' 1948 +Mabel Crawford . 5 JanetMcDonald +W WV Mitchell . 6 William Winchley Mitchell 5 Norman Alexander McDonald , 5 AngusMcDonald . 5 Crawford McDonald . 5 Mabel McDonald .. . . S John Douglas McDonald 4 Wilfred McDonald b: 1887 d 1970 V +Jessie McTavish 5 Elizabeth Jessie McDonald b 1914 +N. H111 . 5 Malcolm Alexander McDonald b: 1923 .. +0. Gillatly . 5 Wilfred Donald McDonald b 1925 . . +Frances McCaig 1 5 Nancy McDonald b: 1928 +Aâ Hoffman 4 Ernest McDonald , +Ann -v~------ , 5 Elizabeth Ann McDonald 130 -------------- --------------- V 4 Everett McDonald : +Fern McDonald 5 John Hector McDonald 4 Stuan McDonald 4 Keith McDonald ,1 +Dorothy Williams . 5 Patricia McDonald 5 Joan McDonald . ,. 5 Spencer Charles McDonald ., 3 Mary Helen McLean b: 1860 d: 1930 + ............... .. 3 Alexander Ernest McLean b: 1863 . +Hattie Thorpe , . ., ,. V 4 HarolndLean d 1974 .. 3 Margaret Flora McLean b: 1865 +Anhur Bell 4 Stanley Bell . . 4 AlexanderBell : : 4 Ernest Bell 4 Dorothy Bell Chart #10 - Family of James Lamb and Sarah Ann Baker F 2 JamesLamb b: 1828 d' 1914 Mâ ââ5; G G/ +SarahAnnBaker bâ 1835 d: 1914 . 3 Margaret/Maggie Baker Lamb b. 1856 d' 1888 +Hugh Campbell m: 1885 ..... .. 4 James/Jim William Middleton Campbell b 1887 d: 1952 . 4 Hugh Percival/Percy Baker Campbell b: 1888 d: 1972 1 : +Sarah Ethel Campbell b: 1887 m: 1947 d: 1952 *2nd Wife of Hugh Percival/Percy Baker Campbellâ . ., +DoraHall Thomas b; 1900 m. 1957 3 James Edgar Lamb b, 1858 d: 1892 +Lucy Ferguson GK 4 Ethel Janet Lamb b: 1893 d: 1954 +Ear1Munson . 5 LouellaMunson +Fred Wheeler m: 1938 6 Paula Diane Wheeler b: 1938 6 Cherrie Denise Wheeler b: 1947 9/? K 3 John Dewar Lamb b: 1860 d: 1890 .7 / 39 +AnnieMcLeondFarlane b: 1869 m: 1888 am 9â ââ5 -â :/ Buckwwmm. gun/1:» In/ a 131 -------------- --------------- Q) x 4 Elizabeth/Lizzie Pearl Lamb b: 1889 d: 1974 Hâ . +Jothe1erMcLachlan b: 1876 m: 1914 d: 1929 V 5 Donald Campbell McLachlan b: 1915 5 John Harold McLachlan b: 1917 d: 1993 .. +Violet Fisher 1111 1951 d: 1972 *2nd Wife of John Harold McLachlan: +Gwyn Thomas Crowe m: 1973 d: 1973 5 ------- McLachlan b: 1920 d: 1920 5 Evelyn Pearl McLachlan b: 1921 +Edward B. M Hodgins b: 1908 m: 1962 : 6 Michael Hodgins b: 1964 .. +Ann Beaudoin m: 1981 . . 7 ChristinaAnnHodgins b' 1981 .. .. .: 7 Scott Michael Hodgins b. 1984 , :V . : 6 Elizabeth Pearl Tracey Hodgins b: 1966 5 William/Bill Warren McLachlan b: 1923 . +Phyllis Hope Raynard b: 1925 m: 1945 .. 6 Deborah Jane McLachlan b: 1951 ., ..Ww MWâ) G W . H VVVVV .V 6 Janet Evelyn McLachlan b' 1955 +J'0'V Mean. " â7â ,..:. .. 5 Malcolm James/Ted McLachlan b: 1928 Duwv 3" Mâ "1"; AW?â . : . +AntoinetteBerci b: 1928 m: 1951 h WW- MW?â â"""âââ : . : : : : . . . : . . . . 6 James Ronald McLachlan bâ 1956 I) ' 7â) 7â . +Karen Roesler m: 1979 6 David Anthony McLachlan b: 1959 : : ., . 6 Karen Isabel McLachlan b. 1961 , ., . . ., .. 6 John PeterMcLachlan b: 1964 . 3 Peter Osborne Lamb bâ 1862 d: 1940 . +Mary Carlena/Lena Mielke b: 1868 m: 1889 d: 1957 : . 4 JohnGilbertLamb b: 1891 d: 1892 .. 4 Mary Carlena Lamb bâ 1893 d: 1974 . +Joseph Grandmajson b' 1889 m: 1912 d: 1970 . 5 Ernest James Grandmajson b: 1913 . +Hazel Elizabeth Lindblad b: 1917 m. 1940 . 6 Lynn Reta Grandmalson b. 1946 +Barry Thorns m: 1968 6 Peter Ernest Grandmaison b: 1955 . +Susan Guenette b: 1956 m: 1975 : .. . 7 BarryRyanGTandmaison b 1981 .1 5 Norman Charles Grandmajson b: 1916 d: 1917 4 Lucy Janet Lamb b: 1897 +Roy Alexander Reid b: 1895 m: 1918 d: 1972 , 5 Twin daughters Reid bâ 1918 d: 1918 5 Ruth Janet Reid b 1920 +J0hnSchinde1 bâ 1898 m: 1957 d: 1970 132 -------------- --------------- .. . .i 4 Ruby Ruth Lamb 1): 1900 d: 1969 .. +GeorgeC1arkson b 1892 m; 1920 d: 1974 . 5 Gladys Louella Clarkson 1:: 1921 +John Eric Ferguson b. 1915 m' 1948 d: 2000 ., , 6 Helen Maureen Ferguson b: 1950 V 6 Brian George Ferguson 13: 1953 +Sy1viaBohm b: 1956 mâ 1978 i, . 7 Michaela Sylvia Ferguson bâ 1981 . V .. 7 Jade Shannon Ferguson b: 1982 .... ., 7 Kyle Brian Ferguson 13â 1983 6 Eleanor Jean Ferguson 1:: 1956 +Ian Douglas Smiley b: 1954 m: 1991 . 7 Jason Lee Smiley bâ 1992 d: 1993 V 7 Marina Katelyn Smiley b: 1994 . 7 Sheena Lacey Smiley b 1996 5 anon Evelyn Clarkson b: 1925 .. .. i. +Sidney Charles Wilcox b: 1927 m' 1952 .. 4 Helen Alexandra Lamb b: 1902 d: 1993 V +Harold Robson m' 1940 *2nd Husband of Helen Alexandra Lamb: .. V . . . .V, +John Erickson 3 ElizabethArmLamb b. 1864 d. 1883 3 Helen/Ella Edwards Lamb b: 1867 d: 1952 . +James Albert Peel ** b 1874 mâ 1899 d: 1955 4 Anna Isabel Peel 1) 1902 d' 1925 +Ti Watson Kirkconnell b 1895 m: 1924 d: 1977 . 5 James Walter Kirkeonnell b: 1925 . +Marjorie Smith . 6 Heather Kirkconnell , +Peter Skilliter . . . 6 Holly Kirkconnell 5 Thomas William Kirkconnell b: 1925 +Dorothy McGowan . 6 Kathie Kirkconnell +George Nixon m: 1982 ... . 7 Amanda Nixon b: 1985 i 6 Betty Kirkeonnell . +Kevin Keane . 6 James/Jim Kirkconnell ,. ., 6 Mary Kirkconnell 4 Walter Peel b, 1905 d: 1960 . +Norma May Lindsay d: 1992 5 William Walter Peel . +Shir1eyMcKissock m: 1961 .. . V . . ., 6 ScottPeel 133 -------------- --------------- 6 Leslie Peel . +Allan Brown m: 1991 7 Kelvin Brown b. 1997 V 5 Norman Allen Peel . +Sue ââââââ vâ . 6 Ronald Peel 6 Susan Peel ,. +PaulMaither . . .... .. . 7 Alexandra Mailher b: 1993 . 4 Stewart Peel b: 1908 d: 1997 , +Marjorie Donna Wright b: 1907 .. 5 James Peel b: 1943 . +Sue ------ -- . 6 Kim Peel 6 Geoffrey Peel ., 6 Michael Peel . *2nd Wife ofJames Peel: V. +Carol-- . 5 Richard Peel b 1944 +Christine Robb m, 1973 . . .. . .. 6 RobinPeel 4 Morgan Peel b' 1911 d; 1971 +Marion Viola James 5 Mary Peel V +Marvin Paul 7 6 Shaundra Paul 5 Helen Peel . +1ngram Gillmore â 6 Ingram Gillmore Jr, . 6 Beverley Gillmore 6 Sam Gillmore .. David Peel .7 V 4 MarionPeel b: 1914 . \/ . +Robert/Bob McKinley b' 1910 d: 1993 3 Lucy Janet Lamb b: 1872 d: 1955 +Robert Thomas Scott m: 1894 d: 1895 . 4 Harold Robinson Scott b: 1894 d: 1961 .. +Lucy Ellen/Nellie Gray bâ 1900 m: 1919 2nd Husband of Lucy Janet Lamb, Helm S. Hews b: 1867 m: AR 1895 d: 1951 . *3rd Husband of Lucy Janet Lamb +James Albert Peel ** b. 1874 m: 1952 d: 1955 r 3 Frances Dorothy/Dora/Dolly Lamb b: 1878 d: 1948 ** James Albert Peel married both sisters, Ella and Lucy Lamb 134 -------------- --------------- BIBLIOGRAPHY Adam, Frank. The Clans, Septs and Regiments 0f the Scottish Highlands, First printed 1908. Revised by Sir Thomas Innes of Learney, Eighth edition 1970; reprinted 1975 & 1977. Edinburgh & London: Johnston And Bacon. Allardyce, A, (Ed) Scotland and Scotsmen of the Eighteenth Century. John Ramsay of Ochtertyre Edinburgh: W. Blackwood, 1888, The Beechwood Cemetery, Ottawa, Ontario Records of Burials. Berton, Pierre Klondike: The Last Great Gold Rush, 1896-1899. Toronto: MeClelland &, Stewan Inc , Rev. ed 1987. Black, is. Thurso Baptist Church, I932, Blyth, George R. Bytawn, 1834, to Ottawa, [854, Published by the Women's Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa, Transactions, Vol, IX, 1925. Bond, Courtney CI, The Ottawa Country: An Historical Guide to the National Capital Region. Roger Duhamel, Queen's Printer and Controller of Stationary, Ottawa, 1968. Burns, Robert, Poems of Robert Burns. New York: Gramercy Books, 1994. Cadell, HM, the Story of the Forth, Glasgow: 1215. Maclehose & Sons, 1913. Canada Census, Grantham Twp, Lincoln Co, CW, 1851; Grantham Twp., Lincoln Co. Ont, 1861,1871; Lochaber Twp, CE, 1842; Lochaber Twp , Quebec, 1861, 1871, 1881, 1891, Clarence Twp.,0ntario 1871; North Plantagenet Twp,,0ntario, 1871, 1881. The Canadian Baptist, 21 January, 1869; 29 August, 1872. The Canadian Cangregatianalist, Vol, XXIV No, 27 & Vol. XX] No. 17. The Canadian Independent, Nov. 15, 1886 & June, 1895. Church of Scotland. 01d Parochial Registers. Perthshire: Parishes of Kilmadock, 1623- 1854; Kincardine by Doune, 1691-1854; Port ofMenteith, 1760-1854; East Lothian: Dunbar 1800-1854; Innerwick, 1614â1854; Oldhamstocks 1654â1854; Berwickshire: Cockbumspath, 1854. 135 -------------- --------------- The Clarence Cemetery: Gravestone Transcriptions, Clarence T wp, 0N, Ottawa Branch, Ontario Genealogical Society, Ottawa. 1978. Cummings, Harley R. A Tale of Two Families, The Runge Press Limited, Ottawa, 1986, Davies, Blodwen. The Charm of Ottawa. McClelland and Stewart Limited, Toronto, 1932, Doudiet, Jacques F. Sketchbook, 1845-1849. National Archives of Canada, Ottawa. Dun. P.. Summer at The Lake of Monteith. James Hedderwick and Son, Glasgow. 1867. Escott, Harry, A History of Scottish Congregationalism The Congregational Union of Scotland, Glasgow, 1960. Fraser, William. The Red Book of Menteith (2 vols.) Edinburgh, 1880. Fenton, Alexander. Scottish Country Life. John Donald Publishers Ltd, Edinburgh, 1976. Gibson, Jesse. Thomas Bone: The Sailorsâ Friend The Upper Canada Tract Society, Toronto, 1908 Gillham, Skip, The Welland Canal Mission. Welland Canal Mission to Sailors, St Catharines, ON. Stonehouse Publications, St. Catharines, ON, 1981, reprint 1983. Hamilton Cemetery Recon/is, Hamilton, ON. Hamilton Branch, Ontan'o Genealogical Society, Hamilton. 1989. Hawkesbury, 1859-1984: 125th Anniversary of the T awn of Hawkesbury, Ontario, Illustrated Historical Atlas of The County of Carleton. H.Be1den & Co., Toronto 1879. Reprinted 1971. The Illustrated Historical Atlas of The Counties 0f Prescott, Russell, Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry, Ontario, H. Belden & C0,, Toronto, 1879. Innes, William, Minute of Meeting in Mr. Innesâs Chapel, Elder Street, Edinburgh, 1830 Ivison, Rev. Stuart. Clarence Baptist Church, Then and Now. 1825-1975. Jackson, John N. St, Catharines: Canada '5 Canal City, St. Catharines. Wilson, Sheila M. Standard Limited, St Catharines, ON 1992 136 -------------- --------------- King, John. Journal. Typescript of Hand-written Manuscript, Baptist Church Archives, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario n.d. Knox Presbyterian Church, St Catharines, Ontario. 125tb Anniversary History, 1841- 1966. - â â - -â, 1501hAnniversary History, 1841-1991, ~--â~ââ-. Communion Roll, Records of Baptisms and Marriages. Lamb, James B. "The Trip 0/ the Whiï¬ets.â The Canadian Motor. The Vehicle Publishers Limited, Toronto, 1907. Lamb, J . William. James Lamb and His Canadian Clan. Privately published, 1970. Lamont, Sir Norman, Inventory of Lamont Papers, 1231-1897. Presented to the Scottish Record Society, Edinburgh, 1914. Lawson, Lewis. A History of Falkirk. Falkirk Town Council, Falkirk, 1975. Legget, Robert. Ottawa Waterway: Gateway to a Continent. University of Toronto Press. 1 975 . Living Our Faith: History of First United Church (formerly First Congregational Church), Ottawa. 1987. Lochaber Bay Cemetery, Gravestone T ranscriptions, Lochaber Twp, QC, I979. Lovell 'sMontreal Classified Business Directory. John Lovell & Son, Montreal. 1904-05; 1 9 l 5 - l 6. Lynch, Michael. Scotland: A New History. Century, London. 1991. Lynch, William J. On Early Patents for Inventions Granted to Residents of Ottawa. The Women's Canadian Historical Society of Ottawa, Transactions, Vol, VIII, 1922. MacKenzie, George A, ed. From Aberdeen to Ottawa in 1845: The Diary of Alexander Muir, Aberdeen. University Press, Aberdeen, 1990. MacKerracber, Archie. Perthshire in History and Legend, John Donald Publishers Ltd. Edinburgh, 1988, MacLachlan, Angus Campbell. Lochaber Bay, My Well Loved Country Home. Privately published, n.d 137 -------------- --------------- McDonald, Jean M. Report of Research on the Lamb Family, 8/273551 Scots Ancestry Research Society, Edinburgh, 1970. McGill University, Montreal, QC. McGill University Year Book, I898. McGill University Archives, Montreal, QC. McKean, Charles. Stirling and the Trassachs. The Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland and Scottish Academic Press, Edinburgh, 1985. McLaurin, Rev C. C. My Old Home Church. Privately published, Edmonton, 1937. McNie, Alan Clan Lamont. Cascade Publishing Company, Jedburgh, Scotland, 1983. McNie, Alan. Clan Mac/arlane Cascade Publishing Company, Jedburgh, Scotland, 1983. Metcalfe, Janet McLean. The McLean Family History, Privately Published, 193 l. ------ --. Ihurso Baptist Church. Thurso, Que, 1907. Mika, Nick and Helma Mika. Bytown, the Early Days of Ottawa. Mika Publishing Company, Bellevilie, ON,1982. Mika, Nick and Helma Mika with Larry Turner Historic Mills of Ontario. Mika Publishing Company, Belleville, 1987. The Mount Royal Cemetery, Montreal, QC Records of Burials. The New Statistical Account of Scotland, Vol. II. Parishes of Perthshire: Kilmadock & Kincardine by Doune; East Lothian: Innerwiek & OIdbarnstoc/cs, Berwickshire, Coekburnspath. William Blackwood & Sons, Edinburgh and London, 1845. Ottawa City Directories. Various years, 1861-1923, various publishers. Pay, William. Recollections of St. Catharines, 1837â1902. St. Catharines Historical Museum, St. Catharines, ON. 1981. Pedley, Hugh. Journal, 1878-1923. Unpublished manuscript. United Church-Victoria University Archives, Toronto, ON. Queen Street Baptist Church: an Historical Sketch, 1833-1933. St. Catharines, ON. 1933. Rockland Protestant Cemetery Gravestone Transcriptions, Rockland, ON, 1994. 138 -------------- --------------- Niagara Branch, Ontario Genealogical Society, St. Catharines, ON, St. Andrewâs United/Presbyterian Church Cemetery, Gravestone Transcriptions. 1989, Sheannan, Helen Lamb. In Search of Blacks and Bones, Kirk-woods and Lawries. Privately printed. Mississauga, ON.1976. . Argenteuil Settlers: McGibbons, Browns and Gervans, 1590-19304 Privately printed Oakville, ON, 1994; Revised 1995 . Dewars ofSt, Fillan: From Glendochart To The Argenteuil Seigniary. Privately printed. Oakville, ON. 1998. Sinclair, Sir John, ed. The Statistical Account of Scotland: 1791-1799. Parishes: Perthshire - Kilmadock, Kincardine by Doune, Port of Menteith; East Lothian â Innerwick, 01dhamstocks;Berwickshire - Cockbumspath. Reprint, EP Publishing Limited. Wakeï¬eld, England. 1983. Skene, William F. The Highlanders of Scotland, John Murray, London, 183 7. Smout, TO A History of The Scottish People, 1560-1830, William Collins Sons & Co Ltd. Glasgow, 1972 Thomson, Loyal, A. Excursions Into The Past. Thurso, Quebec. Privately published, n.d. Taylor, David 3, ed, Third Statistical Account of Scotland: Coupar Angus, Culross, Scotland, 1979, Tranter, Nigel Druid Sacrifice. Hodder and Stoughton Ltd, London, 1993. ------ --. Mail Royal. Hodder and Stoughton Ltd. London, 1989. ---- --i Tapestry of The Boar. Hodder and Stoughton Ltd. London, 1993. - The Story of Scotland, Neil Wilson Publishing, Glasgow, 1993, -. Portrait of the Lothians. Robert Hale, London, 1979. Victoria Lawn Cemetery, Gravestone Transcriptions St. Catharines, ON. 1994. Walkington, Douglas. A History of the Congregational Church in Quebec and Eastern Ontario. Mimmgraphed typescript, n.d, 3*Â¥*x***t 139 -------------- --------------- Lamb Fantin Papers - Legal documents; wills; deeds; account books; letters and notes; copies of patents held by John and James Lamb; advertising brochures of John Lamb & Sons, Engineers; photographs and photo albums; presentation of illustrated vellum to John and Mary Lamb on the occasion of their 50th wedding anniversary; family Bibles (James Lamb, W.A, Lamb); sketchbooks and watercolours by James B. Lamb & Ethel Lamb Marquis; diaries of trips to the Coronation of Edward V11, 1902, and boat trip on the Rideau Canal, 1897; Various graduation and qualiï¬cation certiï¬cates of Edith Lamb & Walter Lamb. Canadian Canoe Association Ribbons awarded to Walter Lamb, 18924938. Other Family Genealogies. Lamb-Gordon, compiled by Leone Lamb Robertson; Lamb- Baker, compiled by Gladys Clarkson Ferguson; Lamb-Gallagher, compiled by Alvin Gallagher; Lamb-Porter, compiled by Norman Macoy; Lamb-Edwards, compiled by Elizabeth Hardie Waymann. Letters, Notes and Oral History: Jean Black, Percy Campbell, Sarah Edwards Church, Gladys Clarkson Ferguson, Jean Ewen Gervan, Dorothy Lamb, Edith Lamb, Ethel Lamb Marquis, Eunice Lamb, Eva Gervan Lamb, George & Dorothy Wells Lamb, J, Arthur Lamb, J ,William Lamb, Rosamond Lamb, Walter T. Lamb, William H. Lamb, Marion Peel McKinley, Leone Lamb Robertson, Elizabeth Hardie Waymann. ******t** 140 -------------- --------------- Index to Individuals on Charts #3â#10 Numbers in bold type indicate charts A lfard - Emma: 8:128 Alton - Shawn William: 6: 126 William Gordon: 6:126 Amundsen - Gail Patricia: 5: 124 A uinn » Deborah/Debbie Anne: 6: 127 Bailey Victoria 5:121 Baker - Gina Elise: 4:120 Sarah Ann: 3:117; 10:131 Beaudmân - Ann: 10: 1 3 2 Becker! - Doris Maud: 4: 120 Walter Albert: 4:120 Bell - Alexander 9:131 Arthur: 9: 13 1 Dorothy: 9: 131 Ernest: 9: 131 Stanley: 9: 13 1 Bellow: - Sharon Ruth-Marie: 5: 123 Berci - Antoinette: 102132 Bill - Sandra Lynn Davidson: 5:124 Blrkett - Thomas: 3: 1 17 Bishop - Samuel: 6:126 Black - Helen Lawrie: 4:119 Magdalene/Maggie Bone: 4: 1 18 Troy: â 6:128 Blair - Fred Charles: 6: 128 Bahm - Sylvia: 10:133 Bar/and - Christine Diane: 6:128 W- Johnaï¬fï¬'l/ (Next Family: Brown) 141 Brown Allan: 10:134 Jan: 5:122 Julia Grace: 4:118 Kelvin: 10:134 Buiâh - Edith Irene: 8:129 Byme: - Henry: 9:130 Cameron - Alva: 5:121 Alice: 5:122 Anne/Annie, 5:122 Betty: 5:121 Clarence: 5:121 Clarence In. ,121 Clive: 5:121 Geraldine: 5:121 Gordon: 5:121 Harry: :121 Hele 5:121 Jean: 5:121 Jewel 5:121 Ross: 5:121 Campbell - Hugh; 10:131 Hugh Percival/Percy Baker: 10: 131 James/Jim William Middleton: 10: 131 Norma McGregor: 5:123 Sarah Ethel. 10:131 Carey ~ Alex Campbell: 5:124 Corbin Leslie: 5:124 Leslie Clifford: 5:124 Cheriton - Gordon Robert: 5:124 Sean Christopher: 5:124 Suzanne Elizabeth: 5: 124 Christie - Jessie Murray: 4:118 Church - Alan Edmund: 5:125 Alanna Beth: 124 Albert Joseph: 5:124 Andrew James: 5:123 Ann Vernell: 5:124 Brian Douglas: 5:124 Brian Eli: 5:124 -------------- --------------- Church - Carol Roe: 5: 124 Daniel Matthew: 5:125 David Brent. 5' Dawson 1am Donald Paul: Donald Stuartâ 5:124 Edmund: 5:123 Eric Stuart: 5: 124 Hailey Leone: 5:124 Howard Edwar : 123 Janet Rachel: 5:125 Jenney Andrew: 5: 124 John Devon: 5:125 Kathryn Lorraine: 5:124 KayIa E115: 5:124 Leonard Allen: 5:123 Leonard Campbell: 5: 124 Linda Margaret: 5:123 Martha Lynne: Matthew David :123 Murray Albert: 5: 124 Rodney Campbell: 5:124 Sarah Corey: 5: 124 Stephanie Leah: 5:124 Stuart Roe: 5: 124 Tami Jo: 5:125 Tara Lynne: 5:124 Tiffany Dawne: 5:125 Timothy Mark; 5: 123 Treena Marie. 5:123 Wade Brent: 5: 124 Clarkron - George: 10:13} Gladys Louella: 10' 133 Who): Evelyn' 10:13} Collins . Laura Annie: 6:126 Rean Herbert: 6:126 Colyn - Margaret Cornelia: 5:124 Canor - Loni: 4:119 Canvery - Sheila 13.: 4:119 Cook » Ethel: 5:121 142 Craik - Jane: 4:118 Robert L.: 42118 Susan: :118 Crawford - Mabel: 9:130 Crowe - Gwyn Thomas: 10:132 Dalton v Beverly Ann: 6:127 Davidson - Agnes: 5:121 Debuc Gaston; 4:118 Dewar - Mary: 3:117; 4:117 Dixon - Clarence: 5:123 Doucetre - Delta Ann: 4:118 Dunlap - Elizabeth Ann: 5:123 Robert Dean: 5.123 Sarah Alexandra: 5:123 Edgar - Amelia/Bell: 6: 126 Edison - Alice: 8:129 Edwards - Abram: 5:121 Albeï¬ George: 5:123 Alexander Simpson: 5:122 Alice: 5:122 Alla . :121 Alva George: 5:121 Catherine/Katie: 5: 122 Douglas: 5:121 Elizabeth Margaret: 5:122 Ellen/Ella: 5:121 Ethel Catherine: 5: 121 Ethel Georgina: 5:122 George: 5:125 George Anhur: 5:121 Gordon: 5: 121 Grace Victoria: 5: 125 Harold: 5:122 Helen: 5:121 Ida: 5:122 James: 5:122 James Simpson: 5:120 Janet Lamb: 5:122 -------------- --------------- Edwards - John: 5:121 John James' 5:12] John Simpson: 5:125 John/Souter Simpson: 3: l 17: 5:120 Joseph Alexander: 5:122 Lillian: 5:122 Mabel May: 5:121 Margaret/Maggie: 5:125 Mary Ann' 5:121 Mary/Minnie Ellen: 5:122 Sarah Roe; 5:122 William: 5:122 William Charles: 5: 121 Wi 1am Hanan: 5:123 William W:: 5:125 Elcome Ednaâ 4:118 EIIs - Beverly Eleanor: 5:123 Ens/(sun - John: 10:13} Ewen - Charles: 4:120 Jean Lorna Avelyn: 4: 120 Ferguson - Brian George: 10: 133 Eleanor Jean: 10: 133 Helen Maureen: 10: 133 Jade Shannon: 1 :133 Lucy: 102131 Michaela Sylvia: 10: 133 Fisher - Violet: 10:132 Fry - Anthony: 5:122 Leita: 5:122 Maurice: 5:122 Nelson: 5:122 Regoma: 5:122 Gallagher - Elizabeth/Libby Ann: 4:117 Henrietta/Heme: 4:117 Louise: 4:117 Mary Eleanor: 4:117 Thomas: 4:117 Thomas Lincoln: 4:117 Gardner - Wendy: 6:127 143 Gamer - Abigail Marie: 6:128 Jennifer Lynn, . 27 Michelle Nicole: 6: 127 Paliiek James: 6: 128 William: 6:128 William Alan Rose 6: 127 Gautier - Jessie May: 8:129 Gebhardt - Kristen Lynn: 4: 120 Gervan - Dï¬Yld Henderson: ' 20 Katharine Eva May: 4:119 Suzanne Jean: 4:120 Gillatly » 0' 9: 130 Gilli: - - 5: 122 Gillmure - Beverley, 102134 Ingram 101134 Gil/mare 7 Sam. 10:134 Gordon - Alexander 3: 117; 7:128 Baby 7: 128 Margaretâ 3:117: 7:128 Grandmnison - Barry Ryan. 10:132 Ernest James: 10:132 Joseph. 10:132 Lynn Reta 10:132 Norman Charles: 10: 132 Peter Ernest 10: 132 Grant - Grace G: 4:118 Gray â Lucy Ellen/Nellie. 10: 134 Ross Eric. 5:124 Gruendler - Annette: 6:127 Guenette - Susan: 10:134 Gyomarv - Ausiin Blayne, 6: 126 Daniel James' 6:126 James Daniel: 6: 126 Matthew Shawn: 6:126 Hairles - Annie 8:129 -------------- --------------- Hammer - Harold: 5:121 Maryâ 5:121 Hardie » Charles: 5:123 Helen Elizabeth: 5:123 Henderson - Margaret/Maggie: 8:129 Mary Jane: 6:125 Hews - John S: 10:134 Hill « N.: 9:130 Hodgin: - Christina A1m.10:132 Edward B. M.: 10:132 Elizabeth Pearl Tracey" 10: 132 Michael: 10:132 Scott Michael: 10:132 Hoï¬nan - A : 9:13 llallingshead ~ Anthony 5.121 David. 5121 Donald' 5:121 Elizabeth: 5:121 HazelAnn 5:122 James: 5:121 lean. 5.121 Mary Helen: 5121 Hopkins - Lyle. 5.122 Marjorie: 5:122 Perry, 5:122 Thomas 5:122 Havey - Lois Mary. 8: 129 Hughes - Michael: 4:119 Shaun' 4:119 Steven: 4:119 Hutton - ------ --: 5'122 Jackson - Barbara Annâ 8:129 Betty: 8:129 Elizabeth/Lizzie May: 6:126 Jean: 8:129 lollâ Glam: 3:129 James - Marion Viola: 10:134 Johnson - Jesse Folsom: 4:118 Margaret: 5: 122 Johnrtan - Florence Frances 8:129 Keane - Kevin: 10:133 Kennedy - Annie M.â ti: 126 Kester - Anne. 5: 121 Kidner - Charles Edward (1904-1988) 4:120 Charles Edward (1931- ). 4: 120 Joan Emily. 4:120 Kirkconnell v Betty: 10~133 Heath 0: 1 33 Holly' 10:133 James Walter. 10:133 James/Jim 10:133 Kathie 10: l 33 Mary, 10:133 T Watson 10:133 Thomas William 10:133 Knau! - Margery Leone: 5: 124 Lagler' 7 Anita 5:123 Lamb - Adam Donald Douglas 6:127 Allan Gordon. 6:126 Ann: 4:117: 128 Arnold Toynbee: 6:126. 62128 Beverly Jane. 6127 Brandon Steven: 6: 127 Brendan George Stephen. 4:119 Carson James Edward. 6:127 Catherine/Kate. 3:117 Charles Kirkvvood: 3:119 Donald James' 6:127 Donald Paul: 27 Edith Helen 4:119 Edith Helen Thornton 4:119 Elizabeth. 3:117 Elizabeth Ann: 10:13.1 Elizabeth Jane. 3:117 Elizabeth M.: 6: 126 Elizabeth/112216 Pearl [0:132 Ethel Florence. 4:118 Ethel Janet: 10:13 -------------- --------------- Lamb - Eunice May' 6:126 Frances Dorothy/Dora/Dolly: 10:134 Frank: 6:126 Gerald Clayton: 6: 127 Glen Edward: 6:127 Glenda Joanne. 6: 127 Gordon Arundel: 6:126 Gordon Lincoln: 6:126 Gordon Riehar 6:126 Helen: 3:117; 5:120 Helen Alexandra: 10: 13} Helen Grace: 4:118 Helen Margaret Elizabeth: 6: 128 Helen/Ella Edwards, 10:133 Helen/NellMary: 6:128 James (1778â1855): 3:117 James (1828-1914): 3:117; 10:13] James Edgar: 10:131 James/Jim Byrne: 4:118 James/Jun Dewar. 6:126 Janet 3:117; 10:131 Joan 6:126 Jean Elizabethâ 6: 127 Jeffrey Comâery. 4:119 Jill Ann' 6:127 Joan Mane. 6:127 John' 3:117: 4:117 John Alexande . John Arnold: 6:127 John Arthur/Art: 4:119 John Dewar: 10: 131 John Ewan Grenfell: 6:128 John Gilbert: 101132 John Hercus/Herk: 4: 120 John William/Bill Thornton: 4: 120 Josée Helen, 4:119 Judith Anna: Kathryn E.. 4:119 Laura Elaine: 6:126 Lucy Janet: 134 Margaret 3.117: 8:128 Margaret Ethel: 4:118 Margaret/Maggie Baker: 10: 131 Mary: 4:120 Mary Carlena/Lena: 10: 132 Mary Helen: 6: 126 Mary/Minnie Ann: 4:120 Matthew Austin: 4:119 Matthew Paul: 6: 127 145 Lamb » Megan Marie: 6: 127 Monique/Sim Lillian: 6:126 Peter Osborne, 10: 132 Philip Joseph: 6:126 Phyllis Kathryn/Kathy Helen 4:119 Robert Bruce: 6:128 Roben/Bob Lawrie 4:118 Rosamond Anna Herbert 4:118 Ruby Ruth: 0:133 Ruth Leone 6:126 Rylan Toynbee: 6: 127 Sierra Rose: 6 127 Stacey Conor: 4:119 Steven James: 6: 127 Susan Alexandra/Sandra. 4: 120 Walter James Thornton: 4:1 19 Walter Thomas/T om: 4:119 Walter/Bud Arthur Thornton: 4:119 William: 3:117; 6:126 William George Christie: 4:119 William Herbert: 4:119 William James Christie 4:119 William/Billy Herbert. 4: 118 William/Willie: 6:126 William/Willie Alexander: 4:1 19 Willie: 6:126 Zachary Bruce 6: 12 Lei tch Jason Daniel: 6: 127 Jeï¬rey/Jeff Cameron: 6: 127 Justin Darren: 6: 127 Lindberg - Joyce Vemellâ 5:124 Lindblaa' - Hazel Elizabeth 10:132 Lindsay - Norma Mayâ10: 133 Loberg - Carmen Richard: 5:123 Logan- Gamer - William/Willie Alan Kane: 6:127 Lotzlen - Lori Anne Wood: 5:124 Lyn/l - Catherine: 4: 1 18 Charles Edward. 4: 1 18 Edna: 4' l 13 Helen: 4: 1 18 Peter: 4:1 18 -------------- --------------- Lyall - William/Billie: 4: 1 18 Alaska}: - Marie: : Mach - David Earle 4:120 Ian Wilson: 4: 120 Norman Hartwell: 4:120 Maither - Alexandra 10: 134 Paul: 10:134 Malma: - Bruce Keimelh: 5:124 Sean Ian: 5:124 Shamin Erinâ 5:124 Mango/d - Charles Fritz 4:120 Linda 4:120 Marks - Olive Mary: 5: 123 1â1 [arqum - Alexander/Al W 4:118 AlcCaig » Frances: 9:130 McCullough - Joanne: 6:127 Mary Jane: 6:127 lVchrmu/d » Crawford 9: 130 Elizabeth: 9:130 Elizabeth Jessieâ 9:130 Emesl: 9:130 Everetl: 9: 131 Fern: 9: 131 Janet: 9:130 Joan: 9:131 John Douglas: 9: 1311 McDonald â John Hemor: 9: 131 Keith: 9:131 Mabelâ 9:130 Malcolm Alexander: 9: 130 Nancy, 9:130 Norman: 9:130 Norman Alexander, 9:130 Patricia: 9:131 Peler. 9:130 Spencer Charles 9:131 Swan: 9:131 Wilfred: 9:130 18 146 McDonald - Wilfred Donald: 9: 130 ,\[cFar/ane - Annie Mebeod: 9: 131 Elizabeth: 4:117 Elhel 5:121 McGIl/Ivrny - Joseph Daniel: 4:118 Sean David: 4:118 AIcGuwan - Dorothy: 10: 133 McKenzie - Charles 5: 123 1â1 IcKin/ey - Robert/Bob, 10: 1 34 1\ IcKiJsack e Shirley, 10: 133 :UcLachlan - ----- --. 10:132 David Anthony: 10:132 Deborah Jane: 10:132 Donald Campbell: 10:132 Evelyn Pearl: 10:132 James Ronald: 10:132 Janet Evelyn: 10:132 John Harold: 10: 132 John Peter (1876â1929): 10:132 John Peter(l964 â ), 10:132 Karen Isabel, 10:132 Malcolm James/Ted: 10:132 William/Bill Warren. 10:132 McLean - Alexander 9:130 Alexander Ernest: 9:131 Ben: 8:128 Bertha 8:129 Donald: 8: 128 Donald H.: 8:128 E1izabet11 Ann 9:130 Eiizabeth E â 8:128 Eva anyâ 8:129 Flora M. 30 George A.: 8:129 Harold: 9:131 James Lamb: 8:129 Jane1 Lamb: 9: 130 JanelJJennie Ann: 8:129 Jennie B.: 8:129 John (1820-1900): 8:128 John (1865- 7) 8:130 -------------- --------------- lMcLezm - John Allan: 8:128 Margaret Flora: 9: 131 Marlon: 8:129 Manon Margaret. 8:130 Mary Helen: 9: 131 Olive Ethel: 8:129 Percy Alexander 8: 129 Sproule' 8:129 William: 8:129 [MERGE - Angelina: 5:121 ll/lLâTaviSh - Jessie. 9:130 Meneer - Myrtle: 5:121 llleredllh . Carrie: .122 Edwin, 5:122 Thomas: 5: 122 Merton A Carol: 4:119 Mic/Ire Mary Carlena/âLena 10:132 Mitchell - W, W,. 9:130 William Winchley: 9: 130 1110172er - Eleanor 5:125 Alan/r - Karyn Elizabeth: 6:126 Alonso" - April Rose: 5:125 Blaine Hartley: 5:125 Clinton Collinso Felicia Dawn: ' Holly Lynn: Jocelyn Joan: 5:125 Lawrence Richard 5:125 Marilyn Dawn. 5: 125 Robert. S: 125 Ronald Brian: Ryan Andrew: : Serena Lynn: 5:125 Wendy Lorraine: 5:125 Mounce Bruce: 4: 120 Emily A115. 4: 120 Patrick Charles: 4:120 Manson - Earl: 10:132 Louella' 10:132 Murray - Joan: â 129 Stanley. 8: 129 ,Veu/eld » Cameron Gordon: 5:125 Corrm Rachelle, 5:125 Gordon Henry' 5: 125 Jennifer Lynn 5: 125 Newton - Terry 6:128 NewtonâGamer » Jordan Patrick: 6: 128 Nickel v Wendy. 5:124 Nixon - Amanda 10:133 George: 10:132 Norman - Keith: 4:118 Oke - Dale Lynn: 6: 126 OMQVINEIâIHNF r Christopher/Chris Lfechuku' 4: 120 Ifechuku/lfe Justen: 4:120 Obinna/Obi Christopher Colton: 4: 120 Parr - Ida Esther 5:123 Parr/aw - Dorothy Lorraine: 5:124 Paul - Marvin 10:134 Sllaundra. 10:134 Pedersun - Ami: 4:119 Peel - Anna Isabel, 10:133 Davrd: 10:134 Geoffrey: 10:134 Helenâ 101134 Ingram Gillmoreâ 10:134 James: 10:134 James Albert: 10:13}; 10:134 Kim. 10:134 Leslie: 10:134 147 -------------- --------------- Peel - Marion: 10:134 Mary: 10:134 Michael 101134 Morgan: 10:134 Norman Allen; 10: 134 Richard 10:134 Robin: 101134 Scott: 1 : 33 Stewart 10:134 Susan 101134 Walter: 10:133 William Walter: 10: 133 Philibert - Marie/Claire: 6:126 POHpS - Donald: 8:129 Douglas J. 8:129 Florence/Flora Margaret: 8:129 Pimp: - Jacob Vincent: 8:129 James Vinoen 8:129 Janet/Jemty: 8:129 Jean Ellice: 8: 129 John Douglas 2129 John Edward 8:129 Patricia Sarah, 8: 129 Percival/Percy McLean: 8: 129 Peter Allan: 8: 129 Phillip M: 8:129 Richard 8:129 Wilfred/Wilf Vincent: 8:129 Porter - Avelyn Alice: 4: 120 Bernice Marion: 4:120 Minnie Maud: 4: 120 Thomas. 4:120 Thomas Percival: 4: 120 Wilfred Hardy: 4: 120 William Alfred: 4: 120 Purdv - Barbara Ann: 8:129 aRasmussen-Waymann (See Waymann) Raynard - Phyllis Hopeâ 10:132 Rean - Patti: 6:127 Reid - Roy Alexander: 10: 132 Ruth Janet: 10:132 1" v'iLCVLL 11M 1'47 AI 67/411111 AM 4; WA DEVJA/ I!â NAA} m: t , Put In; Tau/)ï¬ï¬/a! til/âhrloâf/I (gnu/1â, I0 431/ 148 Reid A Twin daughters 10:132 Robb - Christine: 10:134 Margaret: 8:129 Roberlsun - Ashley Marie 6:126 Courtney Nicole: 6: 127 Curtis James, 6:127 Erica Lynn. 6:126 Judith/Judy Anne 6:126 Norman Bruce: 6: 126 Robert/Bob James 6:127 William Brian' 6:127 William/Bill Franklin: 6:126 Robsun - Haroldâ 10:133 Radden - -- (son) --: 4:118 Francis/Frank Alexander 4:118 lcla Amelia: 4:118 Minnie Helen 4:118 Richard Jolur 4:117 Richard Montgomery/Mont) : 4:1 18 Ruby Catherine/Puss. 4:118 Veronica/Onie: 4:118 William/Billie Thomas 4:118 Rae - Catherine 5:120 Elizabeth/Eliza Ann' 5:120 Roesler â Karen: 10:132 Rose - Bill. 6:127 Saddler - w... Sande]! - Gerald. 5:121 Hazel Helen: 5:121 Robert: 5:121 Schindel - John: 10: 132 Schneider - Joanne Carol: 5:124 Scott . HaroldRobinson 10: 134 Mary Elizabeth: '129 Robert Thomas: 10: 134 Sell - Fred: 5:122 James G.: 5:122 -------------- --------------- Sheamlah < Angela Ann. 4:119 Bradley Jason' 4: 1 19 Christopher Michael 4:119 David Keith: 4:119 Jessica James: 4:119 John Leigh Stewart. 4:119 Mary Diane: 4:119 Slhbuld - Margaret Olive. 5:123 Swanson » Carl: 5:122 Carlâ 5:122 Seigrid 5:122 Simpson - Patricia/Trisha: 4:119 SIG/liter . Pelerâ 10:133 Smiley - Ian Douglas. 10:13} Sml/Ey - Jason Lee.10:133 Marina Katelyn. 10:133 Sheena Lace)â 10: 133 Smith - Marjorie. 10:13} Snyder 7 Ida: 5:122 Sprouse - Stephaine. 4:120 Squarey - Alice Mu 4:117 Stephen » Tracey 4:119 Svme - Amber Hope: 4:119 Candice Joanne: 4: 119 Malcolm Andrew: 4:119 Wallace/Wally James: 4:119 Talbot - Harry: 6:127 Katherine/Katie Joanne: 6:127 Talbert - Maud Lovina: 4: 119 Tam/m - Alex' 10:134 Thiessen - Andrea Michele: 5:125 Curtis Andrew 5:125 Henry Marvin 5:125 Laurie Lynn: 5: 125 149 Michael James: 5:125 Thymus - Dora Hall: 101131 Thompson - Wilson: 9:130 Thams - Barry' 10:132 Thomson - Alexander James: 5:123 Helen Clemenria: .123 Jeffrey Miehael' 5 23 Loyal Alexander: 123 Lyman James: 5.123 Thamsun - Rhonda Helen 5:123 Rosalie Sandra 5:123 Sarah Anne 5:123 Thorpe - Hattie: 9:131 Till - Bernice Elizabeth: 4:117 Frank H: 4:117 Frank Laurence: 4:] l7 Topping - Pearl: 4:118 Truhneur - Christine 8:130 Yurher - Christopher Thomas: 6: 127 Leslie Robert 6:127 P'arllancour! - Ginene: 6:126 Walker - Frances: 4: 118 William/Billie J . 4:118 Wullace - Efï¬e May: 8: 129 Ilâardrope - Darrel Gram: 4:118 George Arthur: 4:118 Heather Lawne, 4:118 Laurie Heather: 4:1 18 Murray Grant: 4:118 Warner < George: 8:128 Henry, 8:128 John Douglas: 8: 128 William: 8:128 Warth - Edward CL: 4:117 -------------- --------------- Wï¬ymann â Alfred Ronnebo: 5:123 Eï¬C Charles: 5:123 lan Tor 5: 123 Karen Lynn â 5:123 Wells - Darothy E â 4:119 Sue: [0:134 Welsh - Wendy Jo-Anne: 5:125 Wheeler - Chenie Denise: 10:131 Fred' 10:131 Paula Diane: 10:131 Widenmn - Jennie Evelina: 6: 126 Wight - Janet: 4:119 Wilcox A George 9:130 Sidney Charles: 10:133 William: - Dorothy: 10:131 Ill/[mart - Margarex E.: 4:117 Wooten - Lynene Rachel: 5:125 Wright â Marjorie Dorma210:134 llfvmrm - Vlolel. 6:128 Zimmer - Amanda Lynne: 5:124 David Joseph: 5: 124 Larissa Rachel 5:124 Samh Mari ' 24 Shauna Ann: :124 ***x*=¢* The names listed in this index and in rhe Family Charts are all that are currently lqiawn to the author, Any errors or omissrons are due (0 lack of information. *>t**:*s< 150