One hundred twenty-five years ago today (May 14th)
Pearl Viola Winfield[1] was born near the small town of
Zephyr, Ontario.
She joined her parents, Percival and Sophia (nee McKelvey)
and two older brothers, Edgar George (b.1882) and Wesley Wilton (b.1889), in a
2 storey (3 room) framed house. She was Percival and Sophia’s 6th
and last child. They had lost 3 children before Wesley and Pearl were born. A
daughter, Ethel Lillian, to tubercular meningitis in 1877. She was only 8
months 14 days old. And a daughter, Edith Charlotte[2]
(b.1878), and son, Oscar[3]
(b.1879), in 1883 to Scarlet Fever.
Pearl is my great-grandmother. The only one of my
great-grandparents I knew. She lived close by and my family would visit her
often.
In 1981 my father had the foresight to interview her and
record their conversation. Those tapes have proven to be helpful. I was not
only able to use them to trace her journey across Canada, from Zephyr, Ontario
to Langley, B.C., but they also helped me learn about her life.
Until recently the only format the recordings were in was
cassette tapes. That changed when I bought a tape to MP3 converter and
transferred them to a digital format. I am working on transcribing them to have
a written copy of the information[4].
The tapes go from Pearl’s early childhood until her own
children’s graduation in the late 1930s’, right before the 2nd World
War. A good 40 years of information. Which, as it turns out, is less then half
of her life.
I’m going to try to share some of the information in those
records and intersperse them with official documents and facts. I’ll have to
split it up into multiple posts as there is a lot of information packed into
each tape.
The house Pearl was born in was heated using a wood stove
primarily from wood of the 100-acre property. The property was half bush,
mostly flat with no creeks or streams. Selling firewood was one of the ways her
father supported the family. They also tapped maple trees to make maple syrup.
One of the memories Pearl had of that time is her mother making dozens of lemon
pies for the sugaring off.
Another memory is riding on the handlebars of her parent’s
bicycle going to church. About 4 miles.
I found the family in the 1901 Canadian Census living in the
Township of Georgina, County of York North, Ontario, Canada.[5]
The official date of the Census was March 31, 1901 but she was not enumerated
until April 18th-19th according to the Census image.[6]
She is listed as Pearl V, Female, White, Daughter, Single, May 14th,
1895, Age 5, born in Ontario of English origin, Methodist, attending school for
3 months and could read, write, and speak English.
I have explored Ontario Land records but there is a steep learning curve.[7]
I think I’ve determined that Percival purchased the east half of Lot 6 Concession
I from David VanNorman, etux for $500 in December 1872. In February 1873 he
sells the south-east quarter (50-acres) to a James Lake. In 1875 he sells the
north half of north-east quarter (25 acres) to a George Winfield[8].
And then it gets confusing because it appears that in 1879, he sells the entire
50 acres of the north-east quarter to his mother-in-law, Charlotte Rawson.
When Pearl was 7 years old, she moved with her family to the
slightly larger town of Mt Joy, Ontario. The railroad separated Mt. Joy from Markham,
but the shopping and other social activities were mostly in Markham, while the
school was in Mt. Joy. During that time, the Winfield’s boarded many children
that attended the school in Mt. Joy whose families lived out of town.
It was a large brick house on Peter Street and according to
Pearl was still standing when she last visited with her husband. I have not
been able to obtain an address so don’t know if that still holds true.
Pearl remembers her father buying her a new suit and hat
when she passed the entrance exam into high school when she was 14. However,
she did not start her high school career right away. Sometime in the next year
her father died[13].
And her mother decided to follow her sons to Manitoba.
The first tape stops right around this point and this post
is getting rather long, so I think I’ll continue Pearl’s story at a later date.
Stay tuned for her life in Cypress River, her teaching career and maybe even
how she meets my great-grandfather.
[1] "Ontario
Births, 1869-1911," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:FMWP-SSZ),
Pearl Viola Winfield, 14 May 1895; citing Birth, Georgina Township, York,
Ontario, Canada, citing Archives of Ontario, Toronto; FHL microfilm 1,846,558.
[2]
Pearl speaks of having 2 sisters and 1 brother who died before she was born. I
have found a birth record for an Edith Winfield but not for Charlotte. The 1881
Canadian Census shows a Charlotta Winfield but no Edith. I have not found a
death record under either name but if she/they died during an epidemic it is
possible a proper death record wasn’t created.
[3] No
birth record for Oscar has been found. He is in the 1881 Canadian Census with
his parents and Charlotta. His death record does not list a date of death only
that his death was registered on September 8th, 1883.
[4] If
you are a family member and would like a copy of the digital files and
transcript, please email me at jodi.familytree@gmail.com,
and I’ll send you a copy when they are done.
[5] "Canada
Census, 1901," database, FamilySearch
(https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KHP9-DS4 : accessed 15 May 2016),
Pearl V Winfield in household of Percival Winfield, C, York (north/nord),
Ontario, Canada; citing p. 10, Library and Archives of Canada, Ottawa.
[6]
Image available at http://data2.collectionscanada.ca/1901/z/z003/jpg/z000118326.jpg
[7]
Even the OnLand.ca website suggests contacting a legal professional, such as a
solicitor or title searcher.
[8] Not
sure if this is his father, brother, or cousin.
[9] http://digital.library.mcgill.ca/countyatlas/projectoverview.html
[10] http://digital.library.mcgill.ca/countyatlas/showrecord.php?PersonID=58679
[11] https://utoronto.maps.arcgis.com/apps/webappviewer/index.html?id=8cc6be34f6b54992b27da17467492d2f
[12] https://goo.gl/maps/zTUaRYo9pG2bSDjq5.
[13]
No records have been found to confirm this. There are various family stories of
what happened to him. Ranging from getting caught in a snowstorm to running
away to start a new life somewhere else.
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