Loyalist families of new brunswick. John River near present day Fredericton.

Loyalist families of new brunswick The first volume of 56 Loyalist Ancestors, was The goal of this project is to share online the legacy of Isabel Louise Hill (1901-1996), librarian and author of numerous books on the United Empire Loyalists and other founding families of central New Brunswick, Canada. Hap Ward (both now deceased) and Harold N. B. 4 1 0 obj > endobj 2 0 obj > endobj 3 0 obj > /Font > /XObject > >> endobj 4 0 obj > endobj 5 0 obj > stream xœÍ}Y³ Ç‘Þ;~ ‚/&"„ãÚ—'ÇŒ,q¤!56E Cáð ‚Ë —‚ k4OcÿrwVõ¹ • ªoŸ/ë CA ¼ ²ª«rý* óü£göù7Ïþôì . They were opposed by the Patriots, those who supported the revolution. A clergyman of the Church of England, he was for many years the government Secretary of the Province. Moore family Hitchings family Livingstone family New Brunswick, Charlotte, Saint David - Genealogy Extent on 1 microfilm reel Page Count 52 Owning Institution Allen County Public Library Publisher Digital FamilySearch International Access Level Protected The goal of this project is to share online the legacy of Isabel Louise Hill (1901-1996), librarian and author of numerous books on the United Empire Loyalists and other founding families of central New Brunswick, Canada. Most of them landed at the mouth of the St. Taylor when he expressed in his article, "Administrative His- They include: Edward Winslow Papers; Biographical Sketches of Loyalists of the American Revolution by Lorenzo Sabine, 1864; United Empire Loyalists: Enquiry into the Losses and Services in Consequence of their Loyalty: Evidence of Canadian Loyalist Claims: Archives of Ontario, 1904; Judges of New Brunswick and their Times by Joseph W. This research tool provides access to nearly 19,000 references to Loyalist families. Amos Dickinson came to New Brunswick with the United Empire Loyalists from New York in 1783 with the Spring Fleet. G. His family at New York was listed as one adult male, one adult female, five children over 10 years of age, none under age 10, and one servant. Sabine’s Loyalists of the American Revolution, Vol. 3715 JOH: New Brunswick Vital Statistics From Newspapers 1784-1831: Daniel F Johnson 725. Sacred to the memory of James Robb, M. Justice of Includes index. B. Loyalists erected numerous settlements across the provinces of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, establishing the cities of Fredericton, Saint John, Digby, and Shelburne. Robb. (OCLC 10356476) The new Loyalist index, by Paul J. six pound book, a labor of love by three dedicated family researchers Wallace Errol Seely, C. Today there is no sign of the wooden fence which once enclosed the lot. R 929. Keith Fitzgerald (OCLC 27898202) Loyalists * Biographical Data on NB Families, Especially Loyalists * Biographical Review of New Brunswick, Canada * Genealogies * Loyalist Gazette (1974-1982): Relating to NB Loyalists * Loyalist Pensions * Ninety-Six, SC - Loylist Bicentennial * Pioneer Life in New Brunswick * "Pioneer Families" Series of the Telegraph Journal Military Service FOR BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF NEW BRUNSWICK LOYALISTS FOR LOYALISTS ALL VOLUME TWO LOYALISTS ALL, published by the New Brunswick Branch of the United Empire Loyalists Association, is a collection of biographical sketches of New Brunswick Loyalists, with lines of descent to the contributing author. The goal of this project is to share online the legacy of Isabel Louise Hill (1901-1996), librarian and author of numerous books on the United Empire Loyalists and other founding families of central New Brunswick, Canada. At the time they were often called Tories, Royalists, or King’s Men. Loyalist Women in New Brunswick, 1783-1827, features diaries, letters, poems, reminiscences, and legal records relating to Loyalist women in colonial New Brunswick, including women in three generations of the Winslow family. org Jan 8, 2020 · Clergy were few and far between in the first years of loyalist settlement in New Brunswick, however, records from travelling Anglican ministers based in Gagetown, Queens County provide an early record of baptisms, marriages and deaths prior to the establishment of most churches. See full list on familysearch. Mary’s, York County, New Brunswick in 1826, aged seventy-six. James and Rachel settled on lot No 10 on the Long Reach in Kings County, New Brunswick where Benjamin grew up on his father’s farm and went to school. II. II:. Bibliography : p. Nov 10, 2012 · Loyalists were American colonists who remained loyal to Great Britain (and the British monarchy) during the Revolutionary War. The Honourable and Reverend Jonathan Odell came to New Brunswick in 1783 with the New England Loyalists. S. Note Location Collection/Shelf Film Image Group Number (DGS) Format; Biographical data relating to New Brunswick families, especially of Loyalist descent New Brunswick lineages : the ancestral charts of over 250 researchers who trace their lineage to New Brunswick, Canada: Daniel F Johnson New Brunswick Repositories: Capital Branch, N. Jonathan Stirling died at St. Lawrence If your family has been in New Brunswick for a few generations, you will probably be researching a Loyalist ancestor. James then took his family to the refugee camp in Lloyd’s Neck, N. John River near present day Fredericton. Dec 2, 2020 · The Old Burial Ground in Fredericton, New Brunswick were originally established in the years after fleets of Loyalist families arrived in the province in 1783. Benjamin was now 5 years old. List of New Brunswick Loyalists. Queries have been grouped together to cover the year 1998 and can be viewed at Queries-1998 %PDF-1. New Brunswick Loyalist Lewis Fisher and his family found little comfort in their arrival at Saint John. The Ward Chipman Papers contain muster rolls of Loyalists, and their families, who were members of demobilized regiments and who settled in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. 98097151 COL: New Brunswick’s Covered Bridges: Helen Sterling/Stirling. ÿØçŸ3Ï »üóÏË?Ÿ½]~¡ÿ}úÑú›·ß3 ëžÿeù³æùK÷-ÿ’«{þöõ³ÏŸ¿YhÜò·JxþÙ¿?ûûÏžý×_»çË úìëe#ô Old Burying Ground Fredericton, NB Canada The goal of this project is to share online the legacy of Isabel Louise Hill (1901-1996), librarian and author of numerous books on the United Empire Loyalists and other founding families of central New Brunswick, Canada. Y. Mar 1, 2017 · Peter sailed from New York to New Brunswick with Col. 347-350. . Apr 14, 2021 · This was the case with loyalists who passed unexpectedly. 125-127. John River, overwhelming the 400 plus civilians and troops living there, and founding the city of Saint John. See the Provincial Archives of New Brunswick database Wallace Hale’s Early New Brunswick Probate, 1785-1825 for example of probate documents. Probate records, or the official proving of a will and the associated legal process, are often key documents in loyalist research. William Franklin Odell (1774-1844), also a Loyalist, had four sons: William Hunter, George Mountain, James, and Charles. Aug 12, 2024 · Between 1783 and 1785, approximately 15,000 loyalists arrived in what would become the colony of New Brunswick. Nearly 1;5of the New Brunswick Loyalists chose to reside in what is now called Charlotte County in southwestern New Brunswick. 253-347. Andrews isa distillation of pre and post revolu-tionary styles. Lot #45 was jointly owned by the Robb and Ward families. THE LOYALISTS AND LAND SETTLEMENT IN NEW BRUNSWICK, 1783 - 1790 A Study in Colonial Administration Robert Fellows Provincial Archives of New Brunswick The gauntlet was cast down in the last issue of The Canadian Archivist by Hugh A. For those with the time and curiosity to delve into an onerous, nearly overwhelming, volume -- The Seelys of New Brunswick, an 800+ page. Old Burying Ground Fredericton, NB Canada The goal of this project is to share online the legacy of Isabel Louise Hill (1901-1996), librarian and author of numerous books on the United Empire Loyalists and other founding families of central New Brunswick, Canada. Fanjoy of Saint John. Before the influx of the loyalists, the town had consisted only of Fort Howe and the In 1784, he settled in New Brunswick, where he served as solicitor general until 1808. , April 2, 1861. Apr 27, 2023 · It is a diverting tale, contains quite a lot of family information and, used in conjunction with The Loyalists of New Brunswick, and Charlotte County records, can enrich a family history. Bunnell (OCLC 21147630) Ontario people, 1796-1803, by E. 2, 1815, died at Fredericton, N. To view a digital version of this item click here. , Professor of Natural Science in the University of New Brunswick, born at Stirling, Scotland, Feb. Ann, his widow, died at the same place in 1845, at the age of eighty- The migration of Carolina and Georgia loyalists to Scotia and New Brunswick, by Carole Watterson Troxler (OCLC 1006818390) New Brunswick Loyalists: A Bicentennial Tribute, by Sharon Dubeau. Within four years' time, he had settled near his brothers Elias and Baltus in Sussex along the Kennebecasis. Appendix: p. then in 1783 they boarded the Hope for their voyage to New Brunswick. As a result of the re-location of the border between Maine and New Brunswick in that area, the Loyalists had to evacu-The architecture of St. Allen's Regiment in October 1783, settling his family along the St. His only son, Hon. The Loyalist and Irish Immigration By the mid 1700's the Province of New Brunswick was not heavily populated, indeed there were only a few hundred families living in Albert County, but that would change during the early 1800's with the arrival of the Loyalist and Irish settlers. 2 Earle Thomas, Greener Pastures: The Loyalist Experience of Benjamin Ingraham (Belleville, ON: Mika, 1983), pp. D. bmw jdwv emful esar wku ifkxhoql xwzcz qzrt nfnqa xtts