Genealogy Chat
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Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Lisa J in California | Report | 14 Feb 2009 13:15 |
In 1857, when my ancestor was 31 years old, he left England and within 9 months of settling in Ontario, Canada he owned a butcher shop. (He and his father both had that occupation in England.) |
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Heather | Report | 14 Feb 2009 13:57 |
Im sure his relative would have tipped him off :) |
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Lisa J in California | Report | 14 Feb 2009 14:07 |
Hi Heather. I had quite a few ancestors leave England and Ireland. Besides the usual famines and looking for a better life, it really would be nice to know what led them to Canada. Thank you for your opinion. :) |
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Heather | Report | 14 Feb 2009 16:53 |
Can you find any wills for these men? Any correspondence. Would they have belonged to local businessmens associations in Canada? All worth looking into. |
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InspectorGreenPen | Report | 14 Feb 2009 18:54 |
Sounds very romantic, but cant see how someone over here would know of such an opportunity. |
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Heather | Report | 14 Feb 2009 19:37 |
OP has said the uncle was there already. |
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Lisa J in California | Report | 14 Feb 2009 20:42 |
Thank you for your responses. I was up all night (couldn't sleep) and finally went to bed just after posting my reply to Heather. It is now midday here, and we have to go shopping. :( |
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mgnv | Report | 14 Feb 2009 22:44 |
Hi Lisa, |
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Heather | Report | 14 Feb 2009 23:13 |
Well I think thats what Lisa and I meant ?- uncle found a good living, did a bit of investigation and probably helped his nephew on arrival to set up shop. No real mystery? |
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Lisa J in California | Report | 14 Feb 2009 23:49 |
Brinsleys, I would think most of my ancestors left for that very reason (grass being greener). In addition to Canadian officials posting information about the land (which I know they did); my ancestors may have heard of other's successes in North America and wanted their own improvements. As far as I can tell, only this one family came to North America after another family member was already there. Thank you for your thoughts. It is appreciated. :) |
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Lisa J in California | Report | 15 Feb 2009 00:10 |
Heather, after all this time of researching, it never once crossed my mind that my ancestor could have lived with his uncle and family. Since my grandfather never mentioned the other branch to his family, and the other branch didn't appear to mention mine, I just assumed they didn't contact each other. |
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Heather | Report | 15 Feb 2009 00:29 |
Wonderful stuff :) If he had a calling card - Id have thought he would have joined some associations and been mixing with other business people. It may well be he had just a stall to begin with - I keep thinking of the series Deadwood - which was fascinating - just a saloon, then the stalls set up and then as the town prospered, the stall owners building shops. Council set up, law department set up, fire service - all based on the real development of the town. There is a website you can google to find the story of Deadwood (the real one :)) Oh, found it |
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Ozibird | Report | 15 Feb 2009 00:45 |
Local history assoc would be a goldmine as well. I suspect, Lisa, that early Canadian life would be very similar to Australia, and that these businessmen became town dignitaries, depending on the size of the town. |
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SydneyDi | Report | 15 Feb 2009 05:41 |
Those of our family who migrated to Australia (well Victoria, it was then) did write home and encourage other family members to migrate. They entered various partnerships, worked for each other and helped each other buy property, so we know they were in contact before they arrived. |
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Heather | Report | 15 Feb 2009 13:02 |
In Norfolk archives there are some supposed letters from Canadian immigrants writing home to the local newspapers saying what a wonderful life they have now in Canada. Of course, nowdays we would all be sceptics and realise this was just a form of advertising, but I dare say back in the mid 19th century, it was just the encouragement needed to go off to the new provinces :) |
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Lisa J in California | Report | 15 Feb 2009 20:16 |
So sorry for the delay in replying. Thank you all for taking an interest. |
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Lisa J in California | Report | 15 Feb 2009 20:23 |
Ozi, I don't believe there is any information about my ancestor (and town dignitaries). I've just about found all there is with him. However, there is a bit published about his uncle's family, so I will try searching for more of their information; it could provide some answers! |
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Lisa J in California | Report | 15 Feb 2009 20:39 |
Diane, because my ancestors were in Canada by 1872, we don't have any letters with family back home in Ireland or England. I don't believe any siblings followed my ancestors to Ontario. With the exception of James' uncle, I don't believe my ancestors came over after other's in the family had. |
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Lisa J in California | Report | 15 Feb 2009 21:03 |
DET, the uncle actually (probably) lived too far away from Toronto to provide the actual livestock, but he easily could have been instrumental in helping James, as his family was highly regarded in the surrounding areas (according to one newspaper report I found). As I previously mentioned, I certainly will try googling the uncle's information. Thank you very much for your thoughts. |
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Lisa J in California | Report | 15 Feb 2009 21:08 |
Heather, you're most likely correct, life in Canada could have been wonderful, but considering the climate in some parts of Canada, I would imagine the first winter was a real eye-opener, especially if no one had mentioned the "little bit of cold and snow that sometimes occurs in winter". ;) |