Wednesday, December 11, 2024

First Marriage of a Canadian Soldier in England





The first marriage of a Canadian soldier in England during the First World War occurred in 1914, shortly after the First Contingent arrived at Plymouth in mid-October. The marriage took place nine days later.  

Lieutenant John Lee "Jack" Williamson of Toronto joined the 12th York Rangers in August and left with the First Contingent on October 3, as an unattached officer with the 4th Battalion. He travelled on the ship Arcadian, which landed on October 15. He married Charlotte Suzanne Josse on October 24, 1914, at St. Andrew's Church in Plymouth. Josse was a 21-year-old French woman living in Plymouth, whom he met briefly while on his way to the camp at Salisbury Plain. 

Soon after the marriage, Jack joined the Imperial Army with the 10th Battalion South Lancashire Regiment in January 1915. He later transferred to the 1st Garrison Battalion Kings Liverpool in September 1915. By October 1916, he was appointed to the RFC and served with the Royal Air Force until July 1919.

His Royal Air Force records indicate his wife was back living in Paris. Jack returned to Canada in 1919 and by 1921 he was a salesman at an Auto & Supply company in Toronto. He filed for divorce in 1923 and remarried in 1924.

A French death index shows that Charlotte Suzanne Josse died in 1977 at age 82. I'd love to learn what happened to Charlotte. Did she ever remarry? 

(c) Annette Fulford, December 2024



Friday, November 22, 2024

French War Brides

 


I have often wondered how many French war brides came to Canada after the First World War. Not a lot of information has been located regarding these war brides. Only one source indicated that there was soldiers' dependents living in France and Belgium at the Armistice that needed to be brought to Canada. These dependents were sent to England first to await passage to Canada. 

I am currently tracking 65 French war brides who arrived in Canada from April to June 1919 with hopes of learning more about them. Do you have a French war bride in your family or one that came to your community? I'd love to hear from you. Contact me at wwiwarbrides@shaw.ca 


(c) Annette Fulford, November 2024

Friday, January 26, 2024

Born at Sea

 

Cedric at Liverpool - Annette Fulford collection

In 2017, I wrote about the birth of  Franklin Cedric Orchard, who was born at sea while on the journey to Canada in 1919 with his mother Winifred, a war bride.

I was able to find his birth entry in the passenger list records but often wondered if any additional records were created at the same time for his birth. There was even a note to the left of his entry on the passenger list indicating whom his mother was and what page she could be found on in the manifests (page12, entry 12).

Cedric - Library and Archives Canada, T-14797

I found an answer to this question a new database for Births, Marriages and Deaths at Sea from Ancestry. I was able to learn exactly what day he was born and also the coordinates of his birth location. 

UK, Registers and Indexes of Births.., Cedric. The National Archives.

It was exciting to learn these new details about his birth, which I was able to pass on to his family.


Sources:

Orchard, Frankin Cedric; Passenger Manifest: Cedric, 12 September 1919, Halifax, at Library and Archives Canada. Microfilm: T-14797 (accessed 3 February 2010).

 Ancestry.com. UK, Registers and Indexes of Births, Marriages and Deaths of Passengers and Seamen at Sea, 1891-1922, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey, England(accessed 17 December 2023).

(c) Annette Fulford, January 2024

Wednesday, January 17, 2024

Births, Marriages and Deaths at Sea

 


RMS Melita - Annette Fulford Collection

In August 2023, Ancestry added a new database that solved a decades long question I’ve had about a death of a young child who was buried at sea. While doing research in passenger lists recently, this database was among the search results. Intrigued, I went on a deep dive down the rabbit hole on a quest for answers.

Back in 1992, I inherited the letter my grandmother wrote while on her journey to Canada as a war bride in 1919. She was traveling on the RMS Melita in September that year. One event she wrote about that caught my attention was the burial at sea of an infant who was only three months old. My grandmother never mentioned the family by name but she explained that the parents were at the burial and that it was much sadder because the father, an officer on board, was blind. 

When additional passenger lists were released in 1998, I was finally able to view the passenger list for the September sailing of the Melita and learned that the couple was the HITCHON family from Brantford, Ontario. Wilton Wallace Hitchon, his wife Enda Verity, and their infant son John Dunstan Hitchon. The one question I’ve had for the past 20 years has been, what did their son die from?

The couple married in July 1916 and Wilton Wallace Hitchon enlisted as an officer in the 204th Battalion in August 1916 at Camp Bordon and later went overseas to France with the 54th Battalion in September 1917. During the course of the war, he was injured and left blind. He suffered gunshot wounds to the legs, hands and face including both eyes.

He was sent to St. Dunstan's Hostel for Blind Military Personnel to recover and learn new life skills. His wife Edna requested permission from the Canadian government to travel overseas and join her husband in England to aid in his recovery. Their son John D Hitchon was born in London in June 1919

I searched for the child in the database, but no results were found so I revised the information to include only the first name of the child and the ship he was travelling on in 1919. I found his name; it was listed backwards as Hitchon John Dunstan.

I learned that the cause of death was mucous colitis, a gastrointestinal disorder, with a secondary cause of marasmus, which is severe undernutrition. He lacked the necessary fuel to maintain normal body functions. I had been expecting his death to be from influenza. His death was a sad ending to his very short life.

The database has also helped to learn more about the war brides who gave birth at sea or died from influenza while on the journey and were buried at sea. So, if you have question about an event that happened on the ship your ancestor travelled on, the answer might be found in these records.

Sources:

 Ancestry.com. UK, Registers and Indexes of Births, Marriages and Deaths of Passengers and Seamen at Sea, 1891-1922, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey, England (accessed 17 December 2023).

Clark, Grace (Gibson). Letter, written 17 September and 24 September 1919, while on board C.P.R. ship R.M.S. Melita to her parents Mr. and Mrs. F.O. Gibson in Sheffield, England; held since 1992 by the author.

Clark, Grace; Passenger list: RMS Melita, 25 September 1919, Quebec, Library and Archives Canada,  Microfilm T14702 (accessed 18 June 1999).

Wilton Wallace Hitchon, Personnel Records of the First World War, Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF), RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 4392 - 40 (accessed 8 August 2008).


Originally published in the Maple Ridge Family History Newsletter, January 2024  

(c) Annette Fulford, January 2024