Reginald K Burnet [1893-1963]
Louisa and Frank Burnet had six children together. Francis Ernest Burnett was the first, born on 5 November 1889 [D03783, D04043, D04044, D06723]. Harold Edwin was next, born 21 March 1891 [D04043, D04044, D04061, D06760, D06843]. The family moved out to Victoria, British Columbia in the early 1890s, where Reginald Kenneth Burnet was born on 21 December 1893 [D03783, D04139, D04044, D06741]. The Burnet family returned to Orillia about three years later. Their fourth son, Hebert Hewett was born in Orillia 31 May 1896 [D06731]. On 12 September 1898, a set of twins was born, including their first daughter, Helen Louise Burnet and Horace Arthur Burnet [D06709].
With a long history of military involvement, many members of the the Burnet family joined up with the Canadian Expeditionary Forces when the first World War began. Francis Ernest Burnet, the eldest son at twenty-five, was the first of the family to enlist on 12 May 1915 in Saskatoon [D06723]. He was assigned to the 53rd Battalion initially [D06723].
Reginald K. Burnet and his father, Frank Burnet both enlisted on the same day, 26, January 1916: Reginald in Orillia and Frank in Calgary [D04060, D06746]. Frank was so keen to join the fight, he claimed to be ten years younger than he actually was in order to enlist [D04060]. Reginald joined his family’s old regiment, the Simcoe Foresters, which had now become the 157th Battalion [D06746]. Frank was assigned to the 137th [D04060].
Reginald Burnet Sailed to England in October of 1916 [D06746]. In November, he was transferred from the Simcoe Foresters to the 10th Canadian Machine Gun Company and was in France the following March [D06746].
In August of 1917, the 10th Canadian Machine Gun Company was one of sixteen machine gun companies fighting in the battle of Hill 70 . On 24 August, Reginald received a gun shot wound to the left side of his head and lost consciousness [D06746]. He woke up a few days later in a hospital in St. Omer, France with a fractured skull [D06746]. Suffering with memory loss and impairment in his speech, he was sent for rehabilitation and later sent back home to Canada in April of 1918 [D06746].
Reg Burnet began his working career in 1911 with R.H. Montgomery, merchant tailor and men’s furnisher [D07315, D07317]. After the war, he returned to Orillia and found work at the store, which had been taken over from R.H. Montgomery by Jack Sinclair [D04139, D06742, D07313, D07315].
He married Wynona Beatrice Williams in Orillia on 8 April 1919 [D04139]. Wynona only lived for a short time after the marriage, dying in a hospital maternity ward on 1 August 1920 at the age of twenty-six [D04209].
A few years later, Jack Sinclair sold the clothing store to a group of four partners, Reg Burnet among them [D07315, D07317]. They renamed it the Arrow Store [D04317].
Reg remained at the Arrow store for a few years, eventually selling his interest in 1924, when he started his own business, Burnet Men’s Wear [D07312, D07313, D07317].
Reginald married his second wife, Olive Hilda Leatherdale 14 September 1925 [D06741]. They had one child together, Dale, who later joined his father’s business [D07317].
Like his siblings, Reg was highly involved in community associations, and remained involved with the Simcoe Foresters and Canadian Legion. He co-organized an “Across the Lake Swim” event that carried his name [D07314, D07317].
Reginald retired from his clothing store in 1961 [D07212]. He died at his cottage on Bass Lake 27 August 1963 at the age of sixty-nine [D07231, D07212].
Monday, September 13, 2021
Monday, September 6, 2021
Profile: Herbert Hewett Burnet
Frank Burnet and Louisa Emily Hewett’s fourth son, Hebert Hewett was born in Orillia 31 May 1896 [D06731].
Herbert Burnet was the last of the Burnet family to join the Canadian Expeditionary Forces, enlisting in Calgary on 20 May 1918 and being assigned to the 21st Canadian Reserve Battalion, Alberta [D06732]. After training in Canada, he sailed to England in August of 1918, but was never deployed to France during his time in the service [D06732]. Herbert was discharged from military service on 25 June 1919 [D06712] and returned home to Battle River, Alberta where he had lived and farmed prior to the war [D04061, D06732, D06843]. In 1923 he moved to McKenzie, Washington along with his older brother Harold and found work in the lumber mills [D04714, D06733]. He married Sarah Mae Long in Wenatchee, Washington on 28 Jun 1927 [D04714].
Herbert and Sarah moved to Herbert’s birthplace of Orillia in June of 1931 [D06735]. Sarah died less than a year later on 1 February 1932 [D06735].
Herbert went on to open an indenpendant service station in 1940 and later open Orillia’s first motel [D07290]. He married his second wife, Lillian Mae Archer McKay, a registered nurse, on 18 September 1940 [D07278].
In 1960, he was appointed as an alderman on Orillia Town Council, after the death of the previous alderman [D07283, D07284, D07290]. He was appointed deputy reeve in 1962 and then reeve in 1963 on the deaths of those office-holders as well [D07290]. Herbert Burnet himself died in October 1964 at the age of sixty-eight [D07290]. Lillian Mae Archer Burnet lived on until 31 January 1980 when she died at the age of seventy-six [D07297].
Sources:
[D04061] 1916 census of the Northwest Provinces, district 32, sub-district 4a, Battle River, p. 10, dwelling 135, 134; RG 31; digital images, Ancestry.ca, Ancestry.ca
[D04714] Washington, Washington Marriage Records 1854-2013, 5144, Burnet-Long, June 28, 1927; digital images, Ancestry.ca,Ancestry.ca
[D06731] Ontario Archives of Ontario, MS 929, reels 1-245, MS930 Reel 21: 501249, 362; digital image, Ancestry.com, "Ontario, Canada Births,"
[D06732] Canada, "Military Service Record - Herbert H. Burnet," 3211402; digital images, ancestry.ca, ancestry.ca.
[D06733] 1930 U.S. census, population schedule, McKenzie, enumeration district (ED) 0024, p. 4A, dwelling 59, family 59; digital images,ancestry.com (accessed 15 Feb 2020); citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm T626, roll 2342218.
[D06735] Ontario Archives of Ontario, Ontario, Canada Deaths, MS935 Reel 449: 105, 30172; digital image, Ancestry.ca, "Ontario, Canada Deaths," Ancestry.ca
[D06843] 1921 census of Canada, district 1, sub-district 6, Battle River, p. 4, dwelling 44, family 45; RG 31; digital images,ancestry.com
Herbert Burnet was the last of the Burnet family to join the Canadian Expeditionary Forces, enlisting in Calgary on 20 May 1918 and being assigned to the 21st Canadian Reserve Battalion, Alberta [D06732]. After training in Canada, he sailed to England in August of 1918, but was never deployed to France during his time in the service [D06732]. Herbert was discharged from military service on 25 June 1919 [D06712] and returned home to Battle River, Alberta where he had lived and farmed prior to the war [D04061, D06732, D06843]. In 1923 he moved to McKenzie, Washington along with his older brother Harold and found work in the lumber mills [D04714, D06733]. He married Sarah Mae Long in Wenatchee, Washington on 28 Jun 1927 [D04714].
Herbert and Sarah moved to Herbert’s birthplace of Orillia in June of 1931 [D06735]. Sarah died less than a year later on 1 February 1932 [D06735].
Herbert went on to open an indenpendant service station in 1940 and later open Orillia’s first motel [D07290]. He married his second wife, Lillian Mae Archer McKay, a registered nurse, on 18 September 1940 [D07278].
In 1960, he was appointed as an alderman on Orillia Town Council, after the death of the previous alderman [D07283, D07284, D07290]. He was appointed deputy reeve in 1962 and then reeve in 1963 on the deaths of those office-holders as well [D07290]. Herbert Burnet himself died in October 1964 at the age of sixty-eight [D07290]. Lillian Mae Archer Burnet lived on until 31 January 1980 when she died at the age of seventy-six [D07297].
Sources:
[D04061] 1916 census of the Northwest Provinces, district 32, sub-district 4a, Battle River, p. 10, dwelling 135, 134; RG 31; digital images, Ancestry.ca, Ancestry.ca
[D04714] Washington, Washington Marriage Records 1854-2013, 5144, Burnet-Long, June 28, 1927; digital images, Ancestry.ca,Ancestry.ca
[D06731] Ontario Archives of Ontario, MS 929, reels 1-245, MS930 Reel 21: 501249, 362; digital image, Ancestry.com, "Ontario, Canada Births,"
[D06732] Canada, "Military Service Record - Herbert H. Burnet," 3211402; digital images, ancestry.ca, ancestry.ca.
[D06733] 1930 U.S. census, population schedule, McKenzie, enumeration district (ED) 0024, p. 4A, dwelling 59, family 59; digital images,ancestry.com (accessed 15 Feb 2020); citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm T626, roll 2342218.
[D06735] Ontario Archives of Ontario, Ontario, Canada Deaths, MS935 Reel 449: 105, 30172; digital image, Ancestry.ca, "Ontario, Canada Deaths," Ancestry.ca
[D06843] 1921 census of Canada, district 1, sub-district 6, Battle River, p. 4, dwelling 44, family 45; RG 31; digital images,ancestry.com
Monday, August 30, 2021
X00305: John Douglas in Amherstburg
Just a quick update on X00305 where I've been trying to find out more about the Douglas and Williams brewers in Amherestburg, Ontario around 1850 and if they were connected to the Douglas and Williams brewers in Guelph from around the same time.
It's not much of a discovery, but going through past issues of the Amherstburg Echo and came across a number of ads like this one posted towards the end of 1849:
It's not much, but it does mean that there was a brewery for sale in the area in 1849. It's certainly not proof of anything, but it's a lead.
It's not much of a discovery, but going through past issues of the Amherstburg Echo and came across a number of ads like this one posted towards the end of 1849:
It's not much, but it does mean that there was a brewery for sale in the area in 1849. It's certainly not proof of anything, but it's a lead.
Monday, August 23, 2021
George Hardy and Mary Buckton
I've written previously about the Trafalgar Hardy Letter as well as some of the other Hardy gravestones in Mississauga. All of the Hardy surname connections seem to be tied to George Hardy and Mary Buckton, who originated from Yorkshire in the UK. Which caught my interest because my Hardy family also comes from Yorkshire.
I did manage to find the marriage record for George Hardy and Mary Buckton:
Interesting that one of the witnesses is named Hannah Hardy. This one had me wondering if there was a connection to my Hardy family, and that the Hannah Hardy witness was the same Hannah Hardy who was the mother of Lancelot Hardy.
But on further examination, I'm not so sure that there is a connection, or at least not an obvious one. George Hardy seems to have come from a different location in Yorkshire than the rest of the Hardy family and I have not been able to find a definite connection between the two Hardy families. Hardy seems to have been a fairly common name in Yorkshire, and so, it's entire plausible that the Hannah Hardy as a witness would have been a different person. Hannah, the mother of Lancelot Hardy would have been in her sixties at the time of the marriage.
And so, with no definite connection found at this point, I'm going to chalk this up to a coincidence that the two Hardy families wound up in approximately the same area.
I did manage to find the marriage record for George Hardy and Mary Buckton:
Interesting that one of the witnesses is named Hannah Hardy. This one had me wondering if there was a connection to my Hardy family, and that the Hannah Hardy witness was the same Hannah Hardy who was the mother of Lancelot Hardy.
But on further examination, I'm not so sure that there is a connection, or at least not an obvious one. George Hardy seems to have come from a different location in Yorkshire than the rest of the Hardy family and I have not been able to find a definite connection between the two Hardy families. Hardy seems to have been a fairly common name in Yorkshire, and so, it's entire plausible that the Hannah Hardy as a witness would have been a different person. Hannah, the mother of Lancelot Hardy would have been in her sixties at the time of the marriage.
And so, with no definite connection found at this point, I'm going to chalk this up to a coincidence that the two Hardy families wound up in approximately the same area.
Monday, August 16, 2021
Profile: Helen Louise Burnet and Horace Arthur Burnet
Louisa Emily Hewett and Frank Burnet had six children together. Their last two children were twins born on 12 September 1898, a set of twins including their first daughter: Helen Louise Burnet and Horace Arthur Burnet [D06709].
Helen Louise Burnet
Helen Louise Burnet worked as a school teacher in Coldwater, Ontario [D05461] later retiring to Simcoe East [D04719]. She died 14 December 1982 [D04046, D07298].
Horace Arthur Burnet
Helen’s Twin brother, Horace was known as “Lad” to his friends [D07299]. He started work as a bookkeeper in Orillia [D04058] and married Mary Alice Dalton on 26 September 1925 [D04058]. He later became co-owner of the Roweburn Farm to the west of Orillia and of the Orillia Creamery Company [D06719, D07299]. Founded in 1921 by John Lewis Beaton, the Orillia Creamery ran a successful operation until it was bought out in 1958 by Acme Farmer’s Dairy and eventually becoming part of Dominion Dairies Limited [D07299, D07314].
Lad Burnet was also heavily involved in the Orillia community, serving three years on town council from 1933 to 1935, serving on the boards for several community organizations and assisting in volunteer relief work during the depression years of the 1930s [D07299]. Horace Arthur Burnet died in October of 1972 [D07299].
Sources:
[D04046] St Andrews & St James (Orillia, Simcoe, Ontario)
[D04058] Ontario Archives of Ontario, Ontario, Canada Marriages, 18353, Burnet-Dalton; digital images, Ancestry.ca, "Ontario, Canada Marriages,"
[D04719] Canada, Canada, Voters Lists, vol. 1965: 2; digital images, Ancestry.ca, "Canada Voters Lists 1935-1980,"
[D05461] 1921 census of Canada, district 126, sub-district 41, Coldwater Village, p. 12, dwelling 120, family 121; RG 31; digital images, ancestry.com
[D06709] Ontario Archives of Ontario, MS 929, reels 1-245, MS929, Reel 144: 453, 038434; digital image, Ancestry.com, "Ontario, Canada Births,"
[D06719] Canada, Canada, Voters Lists, vol. 1968: 19371, M-6104; digital images, Ancestry.ca, "Canada Voters Lists,"
[D07298] "Deaths," Orillia Daily Packet and Times, 15 December 1982, p. 17
[D07299] "Lad Burnet Dies, Well-Known in Club and Church Activities," Orillia Daily Packet and Times, 27 October 1972; digital images.
[D07314] "Orillia Creamery Sells 'Country Club' Business," (Orillia) The Orillia Packet, 24 Oct 1958.
Helen Louise Burnet
Helen Louise Burnet worked as a school teacher in Coldwater, Ontario [D05461] later retiring to Simcoe East [D04719]. She died 14 December 1982 [D04046, D07298].
Horace Arthur Burnet
Helen’s Twin brother, Horace was known as “Lad” to his friends [D07299]. He started work as a bookkeeper in Orillia [D04058] and married Mary Alice Dalton on 26 September 1925 [D04058]. He later became co-owner of the Roweburn Farm to the west of Orillia and of the Orillia Creamery Company [D06719, D07299]. Founded in 1921 by John Lewis Beaton, the Orillia Creamery ran a successful operation until it was bought out in 1958 by Acme Farmer’s Dairy and eventually becoming part of Dominion Dairies Limited [D07299, D07314].
Lad Burnet was also heavily involved in the Orillia community, serving three years on town council from 1933 to 1935, serving on the boards for several community organizations and assisting in volunteer relief work during the depression years of the 1930s [D07299]. Horace Arthur Burnet died in October of 1972 [D07299].
Sources:
[D04046] St Andrews & St James (Orillia, Simcoe, Ontario)
[D04058] Ontario Archives of Ontario, Ontario, Canada Marriages, 18353, Burnet-Dalton; digital images, Ancestry.ca, "Ontario, Canada Marriages,"
[D04719] Canada, Canada, Voters Lists, vol. 1965: 2; digital images, Ancestry.ca, "Canada Voters Lists 1935-1980,"
[D05461] 1921 census of Canada, district 126, sub-district 41, Coldwater Village, p. 12, dwelling 120, family 121; RG 31; digital images, ancestry.com
[D06709] Ontario Archives of Ontario, MS 929, reels 1-245, MS929, Reel 144: 453, 038434; digital image, Ancestry.com, "Ontario, Canada Births,"
[D06719] Canada, Canada, Voters Lists, vol. 1968: 19371, M-6104; digital images, Ancestry.ca, "Canada Voters Lists,"
[D07298] "Deaths," Orillia Daily Packet and Times, 15 December 1982, p. 17
[D07299] "Lad Burnet Dies, Well-Known in Club and Church Activities," Orillia Daily Packet and Times, 27 October 1972; digital images.
[D07314] "Orillia Creamery Sells 'Country Club' Business," (Orillia) The Orillia Packet, 24 Oct 1958.
Monday, August 9, 2021
Joshua Leach DNA
One of my biggest brickwalls is no X00050: trying to find the parents of Joshua Leach (1775-1862). According to his gravestone he was born 9 November 1775 in Connecticut and died 3 February 1862 in Oakville, Ontario Canada.
He came to what is now Toronto in Upper Canada around 1797. It's been difficult trying to find his parents or anything from before 1797. The leading theory is that his parents are Joshua Leach (b. 1748) and Clarissa Pierson, because according to Lawrence Leach of Salem, Massachusetts and Some of His Desendants by F. Phelps Leach, they had a son named Joshua born before 1777 in Connecticut. It certainly does fit the time and location, but I haven't been able to either prove or disprove the case.
But now, there's more to the story. I have been notified that I have a DNA connection with a descendant of a Robert Leach 1735-1786 of New London, Connecticut. This Robert Leach is also descended from the same Lawrence Leach of Salem Massachusetts, but from a different branch. It's an interesting new development, that may help break down this brick wall!
Labels:
Connecticut,
DNA,
Halton,
Joshua Leach,
Leach,
Oakville,
X00050
Monday, August 2, 2021
Analysis: Harold Edwin Burnet Birth
Analysis: Harold Edwin Burnet Birth
Details/Background:
I have not been able to find a birth registration for Harold Edwin Burnet. There are a number of different documents that do give a date/year of birth:
Analysis:
The range of dates is between 1889 and 1893. Harold’s older brother was born in 1889 so it was unlikely that he was also born in 1889. Because he appears in the 1891 census, it is also unlikely that he was born after April of 1891.
The only specific dates given were 22 March 1890 and 22 March 1891. So, it’s safe to say that March 22nd is the date, and it would either be 1890 or 1891.
Of the documents that give a full date, the Social Security and WW2 Draft Registration were the ones where he would have given the dates himself, so 22 March 1890 is the most likely date of birth.
Conclusion:
22 March 1890 is the most likely date of birth for Harold Edwin Burnet.
Sources:
[D04043] 1891 census of Canada, Ontario, district 116, sub-district 1, Orillia, p. 20, family 92; RG 31; digital images, Ancestry.ca, Ancestry
[D04044] 1901 census of Canada, Ontario, district 113, sub-district I-6, Orillia, p. 17, dwelling 172, family 172; RG 31; digital images
[D04061] 1916 census of the Northwest Provinces, district 32, sub-district 4a, Battle River, p. 10, dwelling 135, 134; RG 31; digital images, Ancestry.ca, Ancestry.ca.
[D06843] 1921 census of Canada, district 1, sub-district 6, Battle River, p. 4, dwelling 44, family 45; RG 31; digital images,ancestry.com
[D06760] Alberta, Canada Provincial Archives of Alberta, Alberta, Canada Marriages, 1916: 415, Burnet-Harris; Provincial Archives of Alberta, Edmonton.
[D06758] 1930 U.S. census, population schedule, McKenzie, enumeration district (ED) 0024, sheet 5B, p. 5B, dwelling 92, family 92; digital images,ancestry.com; citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm T626, roll 2342218.
[D06759] 1940 U.S. census, population schedule, McKenzie, enumeration district (ED) 4-27, sheet 4A, p. 4A, household 75; digital images,Ancestry.com; citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm T627, roll m-t0627-04332.
[D06764] "Washington, Passenger and Crew Lists," online images, ancestry.ca, manifest, CPR, 4 April 1923, 800/79-8.
[D06757] 2646317, Alberta, Canada; Alberta, Canada Homestead Reecords; digital images, Ancestry.ca, Ancestry.ca
[D06754] Wenatchee City Cemetery (Wenatchee, Chelan, Washington).
[D06766] Social Security Administration, "NARA AAD Application (SS-5) Files, 1936 - 2007," database, NARA, entry for 67275826133, SS no. 535076619.
[D06763] "US World War II Draft Registration Cards," database and images, ancestry.ca, Draft Registration Card - Harold E Burnet.
Details/Background:
I have not been able to find a birth registration for Harold Edwin Burnet. There are a number of different documents that do give a date/year of birth:
Ref. | Source | Details | Birth Date |
---|---|---|---|
D04043 | 1891 Census | Age 0 on 22 Apr 1891 | 1891 |
D04044 | 1901 Census | 22 March 1891 | |
D04061 | 1916 Census | Age 24 on next birthday | 1893 |
D06843 | 1921 Census | Age 29 on next birthday | 1891 |
D06760 | Marriage record | Age 24 in January 1916 | 1892 |
D06758 | 1930 Census | Age 38 in 1930 | 1892 |
D06759 | 1940 Census | Age 50 in 1940 | 1890 |
D06764 | Passenger List | Age 31 in 1923 | 1892 |
D06757 | Alberta Homestead | Age 21 in 1912 | 1889 |
D06754 | Gravestone | 1889 | |
D06766 | Social Security | 22 March 1890 | |
D06763 | WW2 Draft Registration | 22 March 1890 |
Analysis:
The range of dates is between 1889 and 1893. Harold’s older brother was born in 1889 so it was unlikely that he was also born in 1889. Because he appears in the 1891 census, it is also unlikely that he was born after April of 1891.
The only specific dates given were 22 March 1890 and 22 March 1891. So, it’s safe to say that March 22nd is the date, and it would either be 1890 or 1891.
Of the documents that give a full date, the Social Security and WW2 Draft Registration were the ones where he would have given the dates himself, so 22 March 1890 is the most likely date of birth.
Conclusion:
22 March 1890 is the most likely date of birth for Harold Edwin Burnet.
Sources:
[D04043] 1891 census of Canada, Ontario, district 116, sub-district 1, Orillia, p. 20, family 92; RG 31; digital images, Ancestry.ca, Ancestry
[D04044] 1901 census of Canada, Ontario, district 113, sub-district I-6, Orillia, p. 17, dwelling 172, family 172; RG 31; digital images
[D04061] 1916 census of the Northwest Provinces, district 32, sub-district 4a, Battle River, p. 10, dwelling 135, 134; RG 31; digital images, Ancestry.ca, Ancestry.ca.
[D06843] 1921 census of Canada, district 1, sub-district 6, Battle River, p. 4, dwelling 44, family 45; RG 31; digital images,ancestry.com
[D06760] Alberta, Canada Provincial Archives of Alberta, Alberta, Canada Marriages, 1916: 415, Burnet-Harris; Provincial Archives of Alberta, Edmonton.
[D06758] 1930 U.S. census, population schedule, McKenzie, enumeration district (ED) 0024, sheet 5B, p. 5B, dwelling 92, family 92; digital images,ancestry.com; citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm T626, roll 2342218.
[D06759] 1940 U.S. census, population schedule, McKenzie, enumeration district (ED) 4-27, sheet 4A, p. 4A, household 75; digital images,Ancestry.com; citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm T627, roll m-t0627-04332.
[D06764] "Washington, Passenger and Crew Lists," online images, ancestry.ca, manifest, CPR, 4 April 1923, 800/79-8.
[D06757] 2646317, Alberta, Canada; Alberta, Canada Homestead Reecords; digital images, Ancestry.ca, Ancestry.ca
[D06754] Wenatchee City Cemetery (Wenatchee, Chelan, Washington).
[D06766] Social Security Administration, "NARA AAD Application (SS-5) Files, 1936 - 2007," database, NARA, entry for 67275826133, SS no. 535076619.
[D06763] "US World War II Draft Registration Cards," database and images, ancestry.ca, Draft Registration Card - Harold E Burnet.
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