Thursday, September 25, 2008

Book Review of David Porter's new book on the Pearce Letters


Here is what Dr. Colin Read, Prof. of History, Huron University College, London, Ontario has to say about David Porter's new book From Almondsbury to Aylmer: The Pearce Letters.

History is about the great, the good, and the not-so-good: kings and queens, prime ministers, prelates, merchant princes, and the like. David Porter's From Almondsbury to Aylmer: The Pearce Letters provides yet another powerful antidote to this tired and tiresome argument and hence should be read widely, especially by the historical illiterate, too many of whom occupy positions of power. Those who would argue, for example, that Sir John A. "built" the Canadian Pacific Railway, even though he worked not at all on it, not even swinging the sledge hammer that drove the last spike, would benefit mightily from immersing themselves in this well-produced, well-written, well-illustrated, well-mapped volume about "ordinary folk" on either side of the Atlantic who, like unrecorded multitudes, led lives of consequence. The ordinary is ever significant.

The principals of Porter's piece are, in the first instance, William and Emma Pearce who left the southwest of England in 1852, settling, first, in Malahide in Elgin County, where they joined, according to the 1851-2 census, 176 others from England and Wales then in that township. Chain migration had played its part in their coming, as friends had preceded them and made them aware of the possibilities inherent in the new land. Pushed by the prospect of landlessness in Almondsbury and attracted by the pull of real property, William and Emma struck deep roots in Elgin, eventually acquiring a farm in the west part of Yarmouth, not far from Aylmer. With deft strokes, author/editor Porter sets the scene, establishes needed context, tells the tale, and provides genealogical data. The key part of his book, however, consists of the twenty-five letters discovered in the 1960s between the Pearces and their English relatives, especially William Pearce senior. Though nibbled by mice, these letters provide a rich banquet for those interested in real people who populated a world that is receding in time and memory yet connected still to the present.

On the latter score, does any of this sound familiar?: the call of greener pastures with its promise of land and prosperity, the heartbreak involved in family members leaving for distant places, the fragility of life, the search for solace in the face of death through the promise of life eternal in heaven in company with the newly-departed. All this and more, as the author/editor points out, is to be found in these letters. Particularly poignant is the family falling-out that developed over a small bequest left to William by his departed father, despite the elder William's having done all he could to assure that his three sons would be treated fairly. The journey to this particular family hell was clearly paved with good intentions.

From Almonsbury to Aylmer provides the stuff of lives lived, far more than do many accounts that have those deemed "historically important" swaggering upon the world's stage.


For an index of names in the book see the Elgin OGS web site page on the book.

From Amondsbury to Aylmer: The Pearce Letters


There will be a book launch for David Porter's new book From Almondsbury to Aylmer: The Pearce Letters at the Aylmer Town Hall Library, Wed., Oct. 8, 2008 at 7:30PM.

The book describes the six-week voyage of a newly married couple in 1852 from Bristol, England to New York in a former slave ship, the 600 mile trek to their destination in Elgin County, Canada West (Ontario) and what the emigrants found there.

Twenty five letters from Pearce family members in England to William Pearce of Elgin County touch on political events and social changes in Britain, and articulate the strong Charistian beliefs of their writers, Anglican and Methodist.

Copies of the new book will be made available at the book launch and through Campbell's in Aylmer. More details to follow on distribution.

(photo courtesy of Norm and Liz Pearce, Jaffa, Ontario)

Friday, September 19, 2008

New Elgin OGS book launch


There will be a book launch for Jim McCallum's new Elgin OGS publication "Age Shall Not Weary Them - The Men of East Elgin Who Made the Supreme Sacrifice in the First Great War" on Saturday October 18, 2008 at the Military Museum in St. Thomas, Ontario.
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This 300-page book details the lives of about 150 men from the Townships of Malahide, Bayham, South Dorchester, and the Town of Aylmer who died while serving their country during World War 1.

Full of genealogical, biographical and military history, this book also contains hundreds newspaper articles on these men and their families, and many letters from overseas that were printed in the local paper. Photographs of these heroes are included where available.


The book will be launched on Saturday, October 18, 2008 from 1 to 3 p.m. at the Elgin Military Museum, 30 Talbot Street, St. Thomas, Ontario.

To see an index of the Elgin County veterans mentioned in the book check out the Elgin OGS web site at:

http://www.elginogs.ca/greatwarmen.htm

1881 Census now online at Libary and Archives Canada site

Library and Archives Canada has now made the 1881 census images available on line.

See: http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/databases/census-1881/001049-100.01-e.php

Note that if you are an Ancestry subscriber that you can link an ancestor 1881 census image under the "Web Links" feature

Web Links

Tuesday, September 16, 2008

1924 Cummins Rural Directory Maps


1924 Map for South Dorchester Township (double click image to enlarge for reading lot owners)

The 1924 Cummins Rural Directory is a source that may be helpful to Elgin County Researchers

Here is a sample of the maps given in the Directory. This map is for the historical township of South Dorchester. Note that Concession numbers are given in both margins as Roman numerals. Lots start on the left margin with Lots A and B then number 1 through 24 right to left.

The 1924 Cummins Maps are available on ILL from the Public Archives of Canada
Our thanks to Elgin OGS member Fred Prong for directing us to this source.

See the entire Dorchester map at: http://www.elginogs.ca/onlinepubs/1924ruraldirectory.htm

Monday, September 8, 2008

Elgin County Gravestone images posted to Elgin OGS Flickr account

The new Elgin OGS Flickr account is at http://www.flickr.com/photos/elginogs
Photos that are posted to this Flickr account are being linked to various Elgin OGS cemetery transcription pages.
For an example see the Dunboyne Cemetery page at: http://www.elginogs.ca/cemeteries/malahide/dunboyne.htm

The Elgin OGS Flickr account also manages the Elgin County Gravestones pool at: http://www.flickr.com/groups/742742@N20/

If you would like to contribute photos of Elgin County gravestones to this pool simply asked to join and an invitation will be sent.

The Elgin OGS Flickr account allows the branch to link thousands of gravestone images at a small cost off the branch server to the transcription pages. Give it a try!