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.
It has been over 100 years since the end of the First World War, but we are still learning about the war brides who came to Canada after the war. This blog was created to promote and preserve the history of the war brides from this era.
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.
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:
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).
Saturday, March 13, 2021
War Bride and President of Silver Cross Mothers in Paris Ontario in 1958
Edith Wakefield (1889-1972) and Albert Dore (1894-1954)
Aquitania - Annette Fulford collection |
Edith Rebecca
Wakefield was born in 1889 at Folkestone, Kent, the daughter of William Matthew
Wakefield and his wife Emma Elizabeth Cullen. Edith worked as a domestic
servant before the war. She met British-born Canadian Expeditionary Force
soldier Albert Dore and they were married in June 1916 at Folkestone, only
eight months after he arrived in England.
Albert William Dore
was born in 1894 at Milton, Oxford, England to Wyckliffe Albert Dore and Fanny
Puffet. Albert came to Canada in April 1913 onboard the Ascania,
which travelled from Southampton, England to Portland, Maine. He was headed to
Toronto but ended up in Paris, Ontario working in the knitting mills.
Albert enlisted with
the 4th Canadian Mounted Rifles (Regimental # 109312) on 23
November 1914 at Toronto, went overseas in July 1915 and trained at Dibgate and
Caesar’s Camp in Kent. They left for France from Folkestone in October 1915.
He suffered from
shell shock after the Battle of the Somme in September 1916 and was in the
hospital for three weeks. He complained of nervousness, headaches, shortness of
breath on exertion, and excessive perspiration at night. He was also easily
startled and had a slight tremor.
He was awarded the
Military medal in October 1916 for bravery in the field “for conspicuous
gallantry and devotion to duty.” The website Great War Centenary Association,
Brant County, Ontario gives a full citation for receiving the medal “in
carrying despatches on frequent occasions under rifle and shell fire. He
carried despatches in daylight through places which were considered too
dangerous to allow other ranks to use.”
"In June 1917, a
shell exploded close by and he was thrown into a shell hole." He returned
to England from France and spent the rest of the war in and out of hospitals
suffering from dyspnoea, palpations, vertigo, fatigue and sweating on exertion.
Albert was diagnosed
with Neurasthenia and was no longer fit for service. He was invalided to Canada
on the hospital ship Araguaya in February 1918, landing at
Halifax, Nova Scotia. The Halifax harbour was severely damaged in the explosion
of a supply ship and a munitions ship in December 1917.
Edith Dore came to
North America on the ship Aquitania in October 1918 with their
daughter Minnie Edith, who was born earlier in the year. They were headed to
Paris, Ontario. The ship travelled from Southampton, England to New York
between October 21 - 28th, 1918.
Edith and Albert had
2 sons and 4 daughters while living in Paris.
In June 1940, their
eldest son Thomas enlisted in the Canadian army at Galt, Ontario and he went
overseas to England with the Highland Light Infantry of Canada. Thomas died of
wounds in June 1944 and is buried in Brookwood Military Cemetery in Woking, Surrey,
England.
Edith Dore was the
president of the Silver Cross Mothers in Paris, Ontario in 1958.
Albert died in 1954 and Edith in 1972. They are buried in the local
cemetery in Paris.
Sources:
Bennett, S. G.
The 4th Canadian Mounted Rifles, 1914-1919, Internet Archive https://archive.org/details/mountedrifles00bennuoft/page/4/mode/1up
(accessed October 4, 2020)
Albert William Dore MM, Great War Centenary Association website, Brant County, Ontario http://www.doingourbit.ca/profile/albert-dore-mm?page=4 (accessed October 4, 2020)
Albert William
Dore, 4th CMR website http://www.4cmr.com/dore.htm (accessed August 4, 2020)
Albert William
Dore, Personnel Records of the First World War, Regimental No 109312, RG 150, Accession
1992-93/166, Box 2604 – 2, Library and Archives Canada. https://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/military-heritage/first-world-war/personnel-records/Pages/item.aspx?IdNumber=360825
(accessed August 1, 2020)
Thomas William Dore, Service No A/37579, Canadian Virtual War Memorial (CVWM) https://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembrance/memorials/canadian-virtual-war-memorial/detail/2762464?Thomas%20William%20Dore (accessed August 1, 2020)
Chilliwack
Progress, August 27, 1958, 20 https://theprogress.newspapers.com/ (accessed August 4, 2020)
London Gazette,
29805, page 10488, 27 October 1916 https://www.thegazette.co.uk/awards-and-accreditation (accessed August 4, 2020)
(c) Annette Fulford, March 2021
Friday, March 5, 2021
Red Cross Nurses Are Brides Today at Double Wedding Here
Romance Indeed in this Happy Ceremony - Grooms Returned Soldiers - Met on Train on Way to City.
A real romance, in fact, two romances, culminated in a double wedding in the solemn quietude of Trinity church this afternoon when James Steadman of Calgary became the husband of Dorothy Tucker of Reigate, England and George Kerr of Moose Jaw wedded Ethel E. Masters of London, Eng. The grooms are returned soldiers and the brides returned nurses, all four having seen strenuous services in the late war from its earliest stages.
Tunisian - Annette Fulford collection |
I posted an article back in 2019 about the young women who travelled to Canada after the war to be married to former Canadian Expeditionary Force soldiers.
The brides from the article were Ethel Emily Masters, age 22 and Dorothy Tucker, age 31. They arrived together on the Tunisian after the war, which landed at Saint John, New Brunswick on February 10, 1919. The ceremony was held at the Trinity Church in Saint John, the following day.
Ethel Emily Masters was born in 1896 in Lewisham, London, England
to Hugh Edmond Masters, a Law Clerk, and his wife Ann Elizabeth Muckle. She
married British-born, George Kerr, a Commercial traveller who was born in
Dudley, Worcestershire, England in March 1885. He came to Canada on the ship
Victorian in October 1912 and was headed to his brother living at Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan.
George Kerr travelled to England and enlisted in the 43rd
Battalion, Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF) in Birmingham in July 1915. This is
usual. Most British-born men returned home to enlist in the British Expeditionary
Force or joined the CEF in Canada. Was he travelling at the time or visiting
his brother Walter who lived in Birmingham?
He was wounded on March 31, 1916, just three months after he arrived on the Western Front. George was struck by eight pieces of shrapnel which included his left leg and ankle causing a fracture of his tibia and fibula. He was also hit in his elbow, buttock and his chest causing fractures to two ribs.
After repairs were done on his leg, his damaged leg was 3/4 of an inch shorter than his right leg and he was having difficulty walking. In December 1916 infection spread in his leg. He spent many months in hospital with a variety of additional issues before being invalided to Canada for further medical treatment on the Missanabie in October 1917.
The second bride Dorothy Tucker was born 1887 in Hackney, London, to
George Nathanial Goldsmith Tucker, a Printer, Publisher and Editor and his wife Emily Jane Williams. Dorothy worked as a nurse
before the war but I haven't located where she was during the war when she met James.
James Steedman was born in Japan in 1883 to Scottish
parents. The family returned to Scotland circa 1887 and James came to Canada circa 1907 destined for Winnipeg, Manitoba where he would
find work with the Canadian Pacific Railway as a Land Inspector.
James enlisted with the 56th Battalion in Calgary
in 1915 and while overseas was transferred to the 49th Battalion. He
was wounded in June 1916, a gunshot wound to the arm and returned home on the
Andania in January 1917.
The ladies were roommates on the ship and they both
indicated on the passenger manifest that they were going to Canada “to be
married.” The manifest pages even have details of their intended husbands
and where they lived. The men met on the train and discovered that they were
both travelling to New Brunswick to meet their sweethearts and get married.
I’ve love to know where the women were working during the war and if these couples remained friends. If you have any further info on them, please contact me at wwiwarbrides@shaw.ca
Monday, February 8, 2021
A Soldier's Family In Quarantine at Grosse Isle in 1919
While researching passenger lists at Library and Archives Canada, I've come across some very interesting information about the war brides and their families. The most recent was a whole family being sent into quarantine at Grosse Isle in August 1919 when they arrived in Canada on the Metagama.
Annette Fulford collection |
The passenger list shows a military dependent with three children who were taken to the quarantine station near Quebec. This piqued my interest. Who were they and why were they taken there?
Metagama Passenger List, August 1919, Library and Archives Canada |
Initially, I searched for baby Jack and found his entry in the Grosse Ile Quarantine Station database at Library and Archives Canada but his twin is listed as a female named Florence and her entry could not be found. I searched for just the surname Glover and it gave me five entries for the surname in the results. Database info shows the whole family was taken there on August 12, 1919, a day before the ship landed at the Port of Quebec.
Library and Archives Canada |
The information contained in the database indicated that the children had chickenpox and that they were released 10 days later on August 22. One of the twins listed on the passenger list as a girl was actually a boy named Lawrence.
On further investigation I learned that the parents were Alfred Cecil Glover, Reg # 117067 and his war bride Nora Augusta Prowse. They were married in Kent in 1916 and were travelling to Canada with their three sons: Stanley, age three, and twins Lawrence and Jack, age nine months. The couple lived in Lethbridge after the war.
Nora and Alfred had six sons before the death of Alfred in 1936 at age 46 in Edmonton. Nora died in Calgary in 1958 at age 63.
(c) Annette Fulford, February 2021
Friday, February 5, 2021
Canadian First Contingent Soldier Marries in England in December 1914
One of the earliest marriages of a First World War soldier I've researched is the marriage of Canadian Expeditionary Force soldier Victor Albert Baker, Regimental #16508, to Bertha Van Den Bosch, a Belgian refugee living in London, England. Victor joined the 7th Battalion in Vancouver in September 1914 and went over with the First Contingent in October 1914.
Their marriage took place on 02 December 1914, at Linden Grove Church, Nunhead, Camberwell, London, about 1 1/2 months after arriving in the UK.
London, England, Non-conformist Registers, 1694-1931. Ancestry.com |
Hull Daily Mail - 4th December 1914
Romance of the War - Belgian refugee wedded to a Canadian A romance of the war is reported from Nunhead, where at the Lindengrove Church on Wednesday, Victor Albert Baker was married to Bertha Van Den Bosch. Baker left his employment as an engine driver on the Canadian Pacific Railway to join the Canadian contingent as a private. Miss Van Den Bosch was a refugee who had found shelter in a hostel attached to the church.
A cousin was responsible for the introduction, and although neither spoke
the other's language, an occasional meeting during seven weeks ended in
matrimony. The bridegroom and his father who is training with him, wore khaki
at the ceremony and the only honeymoon was a visit to a neighbouring picture
palace. The marriage was hastened as the bridegroom is expecting his orders for
the front.
The Mayoress of Camberwell attended the wedding breakfast at which one of
the guests offered the bride and groom a little ...... advice: "If you
don't learn each other's language you will be the happiest man and wife in the
world".
The bride is to go to the home of the husband's parents in Canada to await his return from the war.
Bertha did travel to Canada. She arrived at Saint John, New Brunswick on the Missanabie in March 1918 and was headed to Montreal where she gave birth to her first child in Verdun, Montreal in May. Her husband returned to Canada in 1919 and they lived in Moose Jaw in 1921.
They must have learned to communicate as they had three sons and two daughters. Victor died in 1967 at age 76 and Bertha in 1996 at the age of 102. They are buried together at the Rosedale Cemetery in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan and their gravestone reads, "Together Forever".
Victor Albert Baker, Regimental No. 16508. Personnel Records of the First World War, RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 378 - 30, Library and Archives Canada. (accessed February 5, 2021).
(c) Annette Fulford, February 2021
Sunday, November 1, 2020
Surviving the Spanish Flu Pandemic 1918-1919
1st Depot Battalion, Coy 4, P.T. Quarantine Camp, July 1918; Hugh is on the left side of the front row with no hat on. ~ Annette Fulford collection |
Hugh Clark was a farmer living at Storthoaks, Saskatchewan, when he was conscripted into the Canadian Expeditionary Force in 1918.
H |
ugh McKenzie Clark, Regimental # 269054, was conscripted into the army at Regina, Saskatchewan on May 23, 1918, with the 1st Depot Battalion, Saskatchewan Regiment, Company 4. His recruitment papers say that he was 22 years old, 5 ft 9 inches tall with a red complexion, brown eyes, and light brown hair.
The 1st Depot Battalion trained at the exhibition grounds in Regina until
late July. They left Canada from Montreal headed for England on board the ship
Cassandra on July 28, 1918. Their ship docked at Liverpool on August 5, 1918,
and they were taken to Bramshott camp in southern England. Shortly before his
23rd birthday, Hugh was transferred to the 15th Canadian Reserve Battalion.
While training at Bramshott, soldiers from the 15th
Reserve Battalion began getting sick near the end of September. The unit had a sick
parade on September 28 and was placed in quarantine on October 1, 1918. My
grandfather entered the hospital with influenza on October 6, 1918, but was
discharged eight days later on October 14, 1918. His influenza didn’t develop
into a high fever with Broncho-pneumonia as some of the soldiers in his unit
did.
The medical war diaries for Assistant Director of Medical Services, No. 12 Canadian General Hospital at Bramshott, show that 176 people were admitted to the hospital on the 6th and that there were seven deaths on that day. The war diary shows that over the next couple of weeks many young soldiers training at the camp were sent to the hospital and some of them died.
On October 14th, the medical director noted:
“the pathological conditions of the victims from influenza are most startling –
one patient showed multiple abscess of the lung – bronchial pneumonia – sero –
fibrinous pleurisy and acute myocarditis.”
Among the number of young men from the 15th Reserve who died during the flu pandemic was Roy William Clark, Regimental # 269053 who was conscripted into the 1st Depot Battalion on the same day as my grandfather. Roy was 23 years old, 5 ft 10 inches tall with a brown complexion, blue eyes, and medium hair. He was a farmer who lived at Spy Hill, an hour, and a half north of where Hugh lived at Storthoaks, Saskatchewan.
Roy first noticed symptoms of influenza on September 24 and
was admitted to the 12th Canadian General Hospital on September 30,
1918. He developed a high fever with a rapid pulse and difficulty breathing
throughout his stay in the hospital. On his last day, the doctor indicated that
his face was turning blue due to the lack of oxygen in his blood. At 2 pm, Roy
in his delirious state attempted to cut his own throat but caused only
superficial wounds. He finally succumbed to the flu at 3 pm on October 15, the
day after my grandfather was released. Both men were farmers, who were of
similar height, age, and background. What decided the fate of these two young
men?
Another soldier from the 15th Reserve Battalion who survived the flu
at Bramshott was Peter Longphee, Regimental # 268555, Company 5. He was also
conscripted in May 1918 at Regina a few days before my grandfather on May 18, 1918.
Hugh and Peter lived in neighbouring communities, so I am not sure they were
friends before they enlisted or whether they became friends later. Peter was
5ft, 9 ½ inches tall with a dark complexion, grey eyes, and brown hair. He
would be admitted to the 12 General Hospital on October 5, 1918. Records show
that he was released on October 10, and like my grandfather, he only had a mild
case of influenza. Peter would be a witness at my grandparent’s marriage in
April 1919 after they transferred to Ripon camp in Yorkshire in late January
1919 to await demobilization.
The 1918 flu pandemic killed millions of people worldwide during 1918/19. During the war, 300 soldiers were buried at the local church at Bramshott (St. Mary). Of those who died, over 40 were influenza victims from the 15th Reserve Battalion; many of these young men were from Saskatchewan. There were also many soldiers from the 21st Reserve Battalion who died of influenza. I wonder how many young men who are pictured here survived the flu pandemic as my grandfather did and brought home a war bride.
Do you recognize any of the young men from the 15th Reserve Battalion in these photos? If so, please email me at wwiwarbrides@shaw.ca . I have a full list of the young men who died during the flu pandemic at Bramshott camp.
(c) Annette Fulford, November 2020
Sources:
Camp Exhibition is a Model Camp in all Respects. Regina Leader-Post, July 3, 1918, 8 & 9 (accessed March 10, 2019).
Hugh McKenzie Clark, Regimental # 269054. Personnel Records of the First World War, RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 1745 – 30, Library and Archives Canada. (accessed November 16, 2000)
Peter Francis Longphee, Regimental # 268555, Personnel Records of the First World War, RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 5733A – 7, Library and Archives Canada. (accessed March 22, 2019)
Roy William Clark, Regimental # 269053, Personnel Records of the First World War, RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 1761 – 34, Library and Archives Canada. (accessed October 10, 2018)
John Hannibal Badger, Regimental #268680, Personnel Records of the First World War, RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 333 – 18, Library and Archives Canada. (accessed on October 15, 2018)
Grace Clark, photo album, photo of PT class quarantine camp for 1st Depot Battalion soldiers and 15th Reserve Battalion photo.
L.C. Giles, Liphook, Bramshott and the Canadians, (Liphook,
Hants: Blackwell press for the Bramshott and Liphook Preservation Society,
1986)
War diaries - Assistant Director of Medical Services, Bramshott =1917/03/01-1918/12/31. File. RG9-III-D-3. Volume/box number: 5026. File number: 821.Copied container number: T-10912, Library and Archives Canada. (accessed February 4, 2015).
Monday, July 1, 2019
Travelling to Canada to be Married After the First World War
Evening Times & Star, February 11, 1919 |
Tunisian Passenger List, February 1919. Library and Archives Canada |
Sunday, June 30, 2019
Researching Returning Canadian Soldiers: Military Manifests After The First World War (1918-1920)
Toronto World, January 28, 1919 |
Here is a portion of a page from the military manifests. In most cases, these men arrived at Liverpool to board a ship from the Canadian Discharge Depot at Buxton, Derbyshire. Buxton was a discharge depot for married men with wives in the UK in late 1918, once the war was over.
Military Manifest, Corsican, 1919, Library and Archives Canada |
(c) Annette Fulford, June 2019
Researching First World War Brides in Canadian Passenger Lists, 1918-1921
Toronto World, January 20, 1919 |
Maud Carson, Aquitania, April 1918, Library and Archives Canada |
Canadian Military Dependents, Library and Archives Canada |
Steerage Dependents, Library and Archives Canada |
However, not all include full records up to 1922 like the title suggests. Only Halifax has original records indexed up to 1922 and Quebec goes to up to 1921. The rest only include records to 1912. A large majority of the war brides arrived at Saint John, New Brunswick during the winter of 1918-1919. These records are not included in these databases.
Also, if you do know the date they travelled and the name of the ship they travelled on you can view the original manifests at Passenger Lists, 1865-1922 at Library and Archives Canada. You can look at the manifests page by page to find passengers who are not indexed correctly. The only downside to using this database is advancing to the next page once you have clicked on an image. You may find it easier to advance the images at Family Search because their viewer is better.
(c) Annette Fulford, June 2019
Saturday, June 8, 2019
Canadian Pacific Railway ship RMS Melita
RMS Melita - Annette Fulford collection |
Manifest details for the Melita. Library and Archives Canada |
My grandmother travelled on the Melita in September 1919 and she left the family a wonderful collection of memorabilia of her trip including a voluminous letter, a postcard print of the ship and a souvenir spoon. The latter two were purchased with the proceeds of a boxing match my grandfather won on board.
Melita, July 1919 Menu. LAC, RG 76, Immigration Branch files |
This is a menu from the July 1919 sailing. My grandmother wrote about meals she had on board while on her journey:
The sea is awfully rough and has been for some hours. — Quite a large number of people have been sick already, but I am pleased to say I feel o.k. I eat a hearty breakfast consisting of bacon & liver. Of course that does not say I shall not be sick but I am hoping not.
It's a good thing that there were other choices on the menu beside liver and bacon. I imagine that would be hard to stomach if you are experiencing sea sickness.
Well Mother, I must say I am always ready for my meals. We have breakfast, at 7 am, dinner 11:45, tea 4:30, so we are early birds. There are three sittings, usuallyafthalf an hour after the one before.
They could also purchase items from the canteen if they got hungry between meals.
Hello! Here I am again, it is just eleven o’clock and Hugh has just gone down to the canteen (or stores) to get me some apples. — There is beeftea, & boveril and tea etc., to be got there, which are nice warming tonics. It is not dinner time for another three quarters of an hour yet, and you bet I shall be ready for it.
I am so thankful my grandmother left such a wonderful keepsake of her journey to Canada. It has inspired me to learn more about her journey and the war brides from her era.
(c) Annette Fulford, June 2019
Sources:
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).
Library and Archives Canada, Immigration Branch, RG 76, Volume 615, file 908571, pt. 20.
The Ships List http://www.theshipslist.com (accessed 20 May 2002)
Monday, November 5, 2018
Lives Cut Short during the Spanish Flu Pandemic of 1918
Rhoda Carrier collection |
Jim survived the war and returned home to his family. He married Rhoda Jordan in 1950. They had four children together. Jim died in October 1992 at the age of 73. He is buried at the foot of his parent’s grave in the Cameron Hill Cemetery in Holtville, N.B. He was not able to spend this lifetime with them but they will be together for all eternity.
Sources:
William Jonathan Carson, Regimental No. 42, Canadian Expeditionary Force (CEF), RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 1536 – 50, Personnel Files of the First World War, Library and Archives Canada
(c) Annette Fulford, November 2018