Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
|
Jilliflower
|
Report
|
19 Nov 2009 21:45 |
That's fascinating, Julie, thanks a heap - I shall awa' to Google d'reckly (as they say in cornwall) I wonder how she knew him to go and work for him. We know she went to work in a logging camp and then back to Toronto. The family here just wish they could contact her daughter, Vera Sandean and her two daughters. Frustratingly we have a photograph of them! thanks again, Jill.
|
|
Jooleh
|
Report
|
19 Nov 2009 22:56 |
Well I suppose that there's always the chance that the two families stayed in touch.You can but hope.
Do take a look at the collectionscanada site as there's lots of useful info there including places to contact for BMD information.
Keep us posted if you find anything else out!
Julie
|
|
Jilliflower
|
Report
|
19 Nov 2009 22:57 |
I've printed out photos of the Addison Sod house, Julie, as we like to think aunty Dorothy must have gone to work there when she first arrived in Canada. I shall try to find out if there is any record of any staff who worked there. Thanks for your help, Jill
|
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
20 Nov 2009 01:28 |
You may want to bookmark this for future ref, it being unfortunately not much use now:
https://www.isc.ca/VitalStatistics/Genealogy/vsgs_srch.aspx
The site for searching Saskatchewan vital records (BMDs).
The cutoffs are the same as for most provinces -- for births it is actually 100 years, so you have no hope of accessing her chldren's birth records during their ... or your ... lifetime. ;)
The problem at this point is that only births are searchable. Deaths (over 70 years ago) are searchable only to 1917 at present, and marriages (over 75 years ago, i.e. to 1934) are not searchable at all. The indexing of marriages won't start until the indexing of births is done.
So you won't find the birth of Vera Sandean/Sugden/Walker in Canada, unfortunately. (Well, for you; I wholeheartedly support our privacy rules here!)
Ontario records are available only at Ancestry and they have the same cutoff dates, more or less.
Just to add, the site posted by Jooleh has the .ca extension, if you want to find it:
www.collectionscanada.ca
Next up, the phone book: http://www.whitepages.ca/
There is no phone listing in Canada for the surname Sandean. I agree this must be some sort of misreading. Can you say where it has come from?
If the name is Sugden, there are four listings for that name in Saskatchewan. Bizarrely, they are all "address unavailable", something I've never seen there. Craven and Kipling, Sask, are likely small enough places that a letter would reach the people, since there are first names given.
You can search several Canadian censuses to 1911 free here:
http://www.automatedgenealogy.com
If the name was Sugden, there was a household of Sugdens in Qu'Appelle Sask in 1911, including 2 boys aged 10 and 4. Qu'Appelle is a couple of hundred miles from Kindersley, where the sod house is, though.
No help at all, am I?
You need to know what you won't be able to find, though, so that's it. ;)
|
|
Jilliflower
|
Report
|
20 Nov 2009 10:00 |
Good morning Janey, You are a great help! Thank you for all those pointers. Having spoken to Dorothy's goddaughter again, she is adamant that the name is SANDEAN as she corresponded with Dorothy as late as 1947 when informing her of her brother's death, and that was the name they always put on the letters. But I shall check out all the routes available - if any:( As you say, negatives are a positive if they eliminate something. Thanks very, very much. Jill
|
|
Jilliflower
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 12:25 |
More news on Dorothy Walker thanks to Julie, Janie, Margaret et al, I contacted the Addisons and the daughter of James Addison died last year age 97, but her daughter replied to me and a great niece of Charles Addison actaully remembers Dorothy who worked for several farmers in the area after leaving the Addisons, and she had her photograph taken with Dorothy and is looking it out for me!!! How about that for a stroke of luck? I think the next move might be to look in some old Canadian telephone books for Toronto, don't you think? Thanks everyone. Jill
|
|
MargaretM
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 13:09 |
Check this out:
http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1601&dat=19450323&id=UU8ZAAAAIBAJ&sjid=rSQDAAAAIBAJ&pg=7987,6173332
An obituary of William Anderson Sandean, husband of Dorothy Walker Sandean and father of Vera, 22 March 1945, Toronto.
If the link doesn't work google "sandean toronto".. It's the second one that comes up.
|
|
Jilliflower
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 13:49 |
Thanks a million, Margaret, I have just looked at the obituary and it is certainly proof that she DID marry a Mr Sandean! Now we can start looking for her second husband Mr Myers - or the marriage of Vera, as we know she had two daughters. Thanks so much Jill
|
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 19:26 |
I get a different one!
www.qp.gov.sk.ca/documents/gazette/part1/1998/g1199802.pdf
It's the Saskatchewan Official Gazette, i.e. the government publication of official notices about company filings and the like.
THE SASKATCHEWAN GAZETTE, JANUARY 9, 1998 EXPIRATIONS (1997) Sandean Farms Aug. 1 Montrose, R.M. 315
RM seems to mean rural municipality.
Google maps doesn't respond to Montrose, but there are numerous businesses called Montrose in Delisle, SK. Oh there we are, "Rural Municipality of Montrose" no 315. About 100 miles ENE of Kindersley where the sod house is, just SW of Saskatoon.
How excellent to have a reply like tht so fast from the Addison family!
I'm wondering whether Saskatchewan corporate records would have any contact info for the corporation that expired in 1997. This is the corporate registry website:
https://www.corporations.justice.gov.sk.ca/welcomessl.asp
Unfortunately there is a fee for searching the site, $2.00 per name, plus $3.00 to get director/owner names. That would total just under 3 GBP, so might be worth it.
Well done Margaret on finding that google result! I was using google.ca but got bogged down in the construction company in Wisconsin and Sandean Blackbird results. ;)
I looked at a Sandean? entry in the 1911 census in Ontario at automatedgenealogy and it was pretty obviously Landeau, so no go there.
Given how very unusual the name is, I wonder whether it might be worth it to try that constructin company? Mr Sandean could very well have made his way to Saskatchewan from the US. (That's one reason why western Canada is so much more right-wing than the rest of Canada; all the US immigration. Seriously.)
Aha, I see what the blackbird is -- from a cattle auction:
Male KJR 4P 1233846 DC155223 January 22 2004 Sire: G A R GRID MAKER Dam: EASTONDALE BLACKBIRD 4’01 -- EDIT -- I managed to copy the wrong, er, dam thing, and I didn't put the URL here and I'm not going to hunt it up again -- what I was meaning to copy was the entry that had SANDEAN BLACKBIRD as the dam.
She's a cow! No doubt originally from Sandeans Farm. Blackbird seems to be a common name for cows, or a type of cow. Sandean Blackbird / Blackbird of Sandean seems to be a busy girl.
Bone Creek Ranch was where one of the auctions in question was. There's an address for it here:
www.sasklivestock.com/PDF%20Catalogs/bonecreek_2009_cover-12.pdf
or these seem to be the auctioneers:
http://www.cattlemanagement.ca/intro.html
and might be able to direct you. Somebody should know where Sandean Blackbird is these days, and where she came from!
|
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 19:56 |
No.1 and I were just talking about Shuter St this morning, in ref to an architecture column I was reading in the Toronto Star and him, Toronto Boy, explaining to me where Dundas Square is. (There, I'd meant to google maps that for a look anyway.) 147 Shuter looks like a rather desirable bit of real estate, at the time (not so much, now). This *might* actually be a photo of it, the 3-storey mansard roof on the left (going by the image on the address on satellite view at google maps, and searching for Moss Park at google images).
http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/toronto/archive/2008/04/01/moss-park-residents-don-t-expect-peace-to-last.aspx
Sherbourne crosses Shuter just to the east.
The cemetery where Mr Sandean was buried:
Prospect Cemetery & Mausoleum 1450 St Clair Avenue West Toronto, ON M6E 1C6 (416) 651-4040
http://interment.net/data/canada/ontario/york/toronto/prospect/prospect.htm
http://www.torontofamilyhistory.org/toronto.html
Potter’s Field, the Necropolis and Mount Pleasant were the start of the cemetery group now known as the Mount Pleasant Group of Cemeteries. The Group now includes Prospect Cemetery (York Township 1890) Pine Hills Cemetery (Scarborough 1923), and York Cemetery (York Township 1948). The Group’s burial records can be viewed at their head office at Suite 500, 65 Overlea Blvd. Toronto. See: http://www.mountpleasantgroupofcemeteries.ca/our_cemeteries/. [dead link] The Mount Pleasant Group burial records are also available on microfilm from the Family History Library in Salt Lake City.
http://www.torontofamilyhistory.org/search.html
The Toronto Branch has designed an electronic search which provides a complete printout of all details in every record where the request is found in all transcribed records of historic York County.
http://www.torontofamilyhistory.org/search.html#cemetery http://www.torontofamilyhistory.org/research.html
- you can request a cemetery index search.
This 41,722+ name index includes names in all published cemetery transcriptions (as well as many that are unpublished) for the City of Toronto and York Region (or what was historic York County). A search of our cemetery index will provide researchers with all occurrences of each surname searched. We will also indicate whether or not the material is published. Publication cost and order forms will be included. We also indicate the known archival location.
To request a search, print out the form below, fill it in and send it to, Toronto Branch, OGS, Cemetery Index Search, Box 518, Station K, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4P 2G9. The search form must be accompanied by a cheque or money order, payable to, Toronto Branch OGS for a $5.00 flat fee for the first surname, plus $1.00 for each additional surname included with the request. Postage and handling is included.
You might want to browse that site.
|
|
Jilliflower
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 19:57 |
I think you're all fantastic! William Anderson Sandean, who died 1945 in his 58th year, only had the one daughter, Vera, with Dorothy Walker, and they moved to 147 Shuter St Toronto. Perhaps the Sandean farms belonged to other members of his family. possibly the Sandeans were one of the three or four farms that Dorothy worked for. I was hoping to find birth announcements for Vera Sandean and the marriage of Dorothy Walker Sandean to her second husband, Mr Myers, but the archives of Toronto Star indicated that they didn't hae bmd announcements! So how come Margaret could find William Sandean's obituary?
Jill
|
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 20:05 |
(I was editing - I've included contact info for the cemetery in the post above.)
Take a look at the page Margaret found, Jillian. It's a Google digitized copy of the newspaper page. Apparently Google is digitizing back issues of newspapers.
I searched for
google digitized newspaper archives
and found this article
http://www.thecoast.ca/RealityBites/archives/2009/08/05/historic-halifax-newspaper-digitized-put-on-line-by-google
about google making a digitized version of the 1753 Halifax Gazette on line. That's from August 2009. It seems to be a new thing google is doing and would be hit and miss at this point.
|
|
Jilliflower
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 20:05 |
It's all very exciting, Janey as I bet Dorothy would be buried in the same grave as William! You've given me lots of homework. Thanks so much for that - the info AND the homework!:) Jill
|
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 20:07 |
Here we are.
http://communities.canada.com/edmontonjournal/print.aspx?postid=238348
"For more than 200 years, matters of local and national significance have been conveyed in newsprint -- from revolutions and politics to fashion to local weather or high school football scores. Around the globe, we estimate that there are billions of news pages containing every story ever written. And it's our goal to help readers find all of them, from the smallest local weekly paper up to the largest national daily.
The problem is that most of these newspapers are not available online. We want to change that."
One reason why I don't mind spending time on searches like this -- you learn a lot of useful stuff! An archive like that on line will be useful to me for a lot more than genealogy. Like actual work. ;)
|
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 20:08 |
Ah -- don't you think Dorothy would be buried with her second husband? One never knows. But they could well be in the same cemetery!
|
|
Jooleh
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 20:15 |
Wow things are moving on apace! Well done everybody. Julie
|
|
Jilliflower
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 20:26 |
Janey!! Eddy - (who knows NOTHING about Fam History has just made the same observation as you about the 2nd marriage burial! Silly me - I just got carried away! Hi Julie Jill
|
|
Jooleh
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 22:58 |
Anyone have access to Ancestry worldwide membership? In the military records there is only one Sandean -Charles Archibald - Canadian soldier World War 1. Looks like a service record so may include NOK and address. Julie
|
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 23:01 |
Hang on - I'll go get it from the official Cdn govt site, which is free!!
|
|
JaneyCanuck
|
Report
|
22 Nov 2009 23:05 |
http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/databases/cef/001042-100.01-e.php
... Nope, no Sandean in the attestation papers for Soldiers of the First World War - CEF.
It must be Ancestry's garble of this:
SANDELL, CHARLES ARCHIBALD
-- admittedly faint, but the signature itself is very clear: C.A. Sandell. Also the father's name (in lower case rather than the uppercase for his own surname): Nels Sandell. Who/whatever transcribes for Ancestry never bothers looking beyond the first line.
Born 1895 in South Westminster, BC, next of kin father in BC. So no apparent connection.
|