William Wills1
M, #107056
Citations
- [S11198] Correspondence with Diane Simmons, (Personal Archives of David Arthur Walker).
Carrie Hunter Willson
F, #81566
Note* | Dau. of Zachary & Eliose (Morgan) Willson. |
Earl Russel Willson1
M, #54003, b. 26 March 1897
Note* | Earl Russel Willson was born March 26, 1897 at the River Ranch, CrookCounty, Wyoming. When he was young, he and Nena would stake off widthswhile their father, by hand, broadcast grain, wheat, oats and barley froma sack on his shoulder. Grain bundles were put in stacks. Too young tothrow the bundles up, Earl was taught by his father to stack the bundlesin the precise manner to hold the stack while his father threw thebundles up to him. Jay Bush and Earl were horse racing when a cow boltedand ran into Earl, injuring his foot. It was out of joint 23 days. Onthe steps, he stepped down and it snapped back into place. Earl was a World War I Veteran, discharged 1918. He tells of homesteading on the Belle Fourche River, north of his father's ranch which helater took over and ran till his retirement. He also bought Fred's placewhich bordered on the pasture land. Earl wanted to build a log house onhis homestead. His father taught him how to use the broadaxe to preparethe logs. Married Beatrice Lillian Chittim September 6, 1920 at BelleFourche. To this union three children were born, William Earl, VirginiaNeil and Lois Belle. They grew up on the River Ranch. During thedrought in the 1930's, making a living was a problem for everyone. Toeat, a garden and canning were essential. The Belle Fourche River wasdown to a trickle. Bill hitched up the team to a wagon, loaded barrels,dug a hole in the river, and as it filled with water, he dipped it up andfilled the barrels. Everyone helped to hand water the garden. A milkcow was given special care to keep her going. Range cattle got thistlehay (tumbleweed) cut green and salted. This account is found on page 224 in the book, 'Hulett Area Past AndPresent' Compiled, Published and Distributed by Hulett Area SeniorCitizens, Inc. Printed by Sand Creek Printing, Belle Fourche, SouthDakota. 1885-1985. |
Birth* | Earl Russel Willson was born on 26 March 1897 in River Ranch, Crook County, Wyoming, U.S.A. .1 |
| He was the son of Edward Douglas Willson and Mary Belle 'Belle' Baxter. |
Marriage* | Earl Russel Willson married Beatrice 'Bea' Lillian Chittim, daughter of James 'Jim' Henry Chittim and Cora Emeline Martin, on 6 September 1920, in Belle Fourche, Butte County, South Dakota, U.S.A. .1 |
Citations
- [S1133] Hulett Area Senior Citizens, Hulett Area Past & Present (Hulett, Wyoming, U.S.A.: Hulett Area Senior Citizens, ). Hereinafter cited as Hulett Area Past & Present.
Edward Douglas Willson1
M, #54018, b. 11 September 1847, d. 20 April 1922
Note* | Edward Douglas Willson and older brother Walt left New York State and headed west. In 1874 they left Missouri for Denver, Colorado State. Arriving there with no money and no food for several days. In the fall of 1876 they arrived at Deadwood, Dakota Territory. They had traveled with a small wagon train from Cheyenne, Wyoming. Two days out Indians killed the train's hunter. Walt, age 16, took over this job. Ed and Walt hauled freight from Cheyenne to Deadwood. The roads were mere trails so they made out best they could. Going down the steep hill into Deadwood, they would cut a medium size tree, fasten the top to the back of the wagon. The branches would catch and drag, making a brake for the loaded wagon. One of their night stops was at Squawman Dutton Ranch. On one trip with a load of whiskey in barrels, a wheel broke before they reached the Dutton place. Being late, they decided to camp there for the night. Next morning they rode to Dutton's to get a wheel, only to find the place burned and the people killed by the Indians. Walt and Ed worked at the Homestake Mine when it first opened. In 1877 Ed homesteaded on Falsebottom Creek (near St. Orge). It was fifteen miles north of Deadwood. Walt tried to homestead but kept being put off because he was too young. To protect their horses, they built a barn up a brushy draw. (In 1970 Ed's son, Earl Willson, found on Falsebottom where the homestead should have been, a brushy draw with a hole back inthe bank with the walls rocked up. He took this to be the same barn.) The Indians rode around and around their place several times but never bothered them. To cut hay, they dug rifle pits where one man would sit with a rifle while the other cut hay. A precaution to prevent Indians rom killing them. Indian humor comes out in the story. Ed told about two friends who were holding a large horse herd where the Spearfish-Deadwood highways meet. Only one man had a pistol. He went down the Creek to hunt for food. He met 16 Sioux Indians who laughed and held up their hands and said 'how' as they went on toward the horseherd. The man ran back to his partner, but there wasn't anything they could do. Looking up they could see about 50 Indians in silhouette onthe skyline of the two big hills to the east and west of them. The 16 Indians cut the herd for the horses they wanted and left. They would laugh and say 'How' each time they would come close to the men. Ed sold his homestead to Fogelsong. He and Walt rode into the valley on the Belle Fourche River in the fall of 1882. The native grass was stirrup high. This was the place they were looking for. Walt homesteaded, now being of age. You can still see the dugout they lived in that first winter. It is about a mile south of the house on the southside of a hill looking down on the river. The house they built of logs is a part of the present house. They had to remove teepee poles to farm the fields, as this had been Indian campground. When they first started to farm they didn't have a harrow, so they tied thorn bushes together and dragged them over the plowed ground to smooth it. There were three other ranches in the country at that time. Jerry Bush, Camp stool and T-Cross-Ton Beaver Creek. Ed and Walt made several trips to Missouri to buy cattle. In the fall of1886 they had 600 head. That winter the snow was deep and the temperatures very cold. They had cut lots of hay on the meadows to the east and above Hulett. Because of the extreme cold, they dug back into a haystack to make a place for late calves, then closed the front with hay. The calves still froze. The stock froze where they stood. In the spring there were one hundred and thirty head of stock left. Walt went to work as a representative for the Campstool Ranch. The water in the river was very high when Ed went to cross, it floated the wagon box off and down the river. At the same time uncoupled the reach, turning the rear wheels loose. Ed drove the team and front wheels to dry land and had to swim back for the rear wheels. He had bought the first grainbinder in the country. At Preacher Wood's place on Beaver Creek they bound the grain and left the machine in the center of the field. Being a good year, there was a great deal of grain. The shocks of grain were so close together they couldn't get the machine out without making a path for it. When there was a threshing machine, it took a month of exchange work to do everyone's grain. The threshing machine was round, four or six teams would walk around it turning the gears. It was called a horse-powered grain separator. It took a crew of 20 or more men, one man driving the teams, two men fed bundles on either side, each had a boy cutting the binder twine. The grain came out in one half bushel measures into sacks. The sacks were hauled to a granary and dumped. The straw went out an elevator to be stacked, usually by kids because it was so dirty a job. Ed married Mary Belle Baxter on January 1, 1888 at the home of her parents at the Riverdale Ranch and Post Office on the Belle Fourche River n Crook County. Her parents were Joseph Henry and Susan Ellen (Massey )Baxter. A minister was to have come the eighty miles but sent word he was ill. Even 40 below, John Pearson was happy to come and perform the wedding ceremony. Edward Douglas Willson was born September 11, 1847 near Jamestown,Chautauqua County, New York at the family ranch. He died April 20,1922 at the River Ranch, Crook County, Wyoming at age 74. He is buried at the Hulett Cemetery. Ed loved to garden. He planted a large orchard of cherry, apple, plum and pear trees. Raised raspberries and strawberries,as well as a very early and beautiful garden. He enjoyed fishing and liked to take a camp outfit to Sand Creek (Beulah) to fish for trout. Ed added an upstairs and kitchen onto his house, much as it stands today. Ed and Belle had four children, Frederick Joseph, Nina Baxter, Earl Russell and Sidney Edward. This account is found on page 223 in the book, 'Hulett Area Past and Present' Compiled, Published and Distributed by Hulett Area Senior Citizens, Inc. Printed by Sand Creek Printing, Belle Fourche, SouthDakota. 1885-1985. |
Birth* | Edward Douglas Willson was born on 11 September 1847 in near Jamestown, Chautauqua County, New York, U.S.A. .1 |
| He was the son of Russell Willson and Cordedlia Catherin Schoonmacher. |
Marriage* | Edward Douglas Willson married Mary Belle 'Belle' Baxter, daughter of Joseph Henry Baxter and Susan Ellen Massey, on 1 January 1888, in Riverdale Ranch, on the Belle Fourche River, Crook County, Wyoming .1 |
Death* | Edward Douglas Willson died on 20 April 1922, at age 74, in River Ranch, Crook County, Wyoming, U.S.A. .1 |
Burial* | He was buried in Hulett Cemetery, Block 2, Lot 31, Hulett, Crook County, Wyoming, U.S.A. .2 |
Citations
- [S1133] Hulett Area Senior Citizens, Hulett Area Past & Present (Hulett, Wyoming, U.S.A.: Hulett Area Senior Citizens, ). Hereinafter cited as Hulett Area Past & Present.
- [S1034] More Hullett Area Past & Present, Hullet Area Senior Citizens, compiler, (Hullett, Ontario: Hullet Area Senior Citizens). Hereinafter cited as More Hullett Area Past & Present.
Edward Pollock Willson1
M, #54109, b. 4 February 1886
Citations
- [S993] Crook County Historical Society, Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920 (303 East Sioux, Pierre, South Dakota: State Publishing Company, 1981). Hereinafter cited as Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920.
Ella Willson1
F, #53666, d. 17 April 1927
Biographical Note* | Ella Willson and twin brother, Ernest R. were born in New York. Their parents, who were of English descent had eight children. Their father, a turner, made all kinds of fancy tops, legs, and decorations for furniture and house trim. Ella married in 1875, at Rock Port, Missouri, to Ezekle Colvin, who owned a farm and raised cattle. See more about Ezekle. In the fall of 1880 Ella and her son, Ben, accompanied her brothers,Walter and Ernest to the Black Hills. There Ella established a boarding house for miners and prospectors at Strawberry Gulch. The week before Christmas 1882, Ella and Ben started east on the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad to visit relatives. A heavy snow storm caused them to be snowbound at Pierre, South Dakota for several days. While confined in Pierre, Ben became very ill with pneumonia. Albert Pollock came to Deadwood, South Dakota, in 1877 from Nova Scotia, and was the proprietor of the first established photograph gallery in the town. He was en route home for the holidays, and also became marooned in Pierre. Albert and Ella became acquainted and he was good help in caring for her sick son. When the train returned to Deadwood, they decided to go back with it. On the 6th of September, 1883 they were married in Deadwood, by R.H. Dallivin, a Methodist minister. Albert and Ella took their wedding trip to Nova Scotia via boat from New York. They spent a month or so with his relatives, and were given a set of Syracuse china. In the fall of 1886, they sold the photography shop and moved to Wyoming. Albert Pollock filed on a homestead on the Belle Fourche River, three miles below Hulett, Wyoming. He and his brother-in-law, Warter Willson, bought cattle to stock the ranch. In the terrible winter of 1886 and1887, when cattle froze to death near hay stacks, they lost all but forty head. Albert and Ella lived on the homestead until 1897 when they sold to Mr. Soyster, and moved back to Deadwood, South Dakota. Albert passed away in August, 1899, after nearly two years of suffering from cancer. He was a Mason and a member of the Ancient Order of United Workmen. Ella Pollock continued to live in Deadwood until February 1927, when she moved to Alva, Wyoming to make her home with her son Ben and Lana. She passed away the 17th of April, 1927, and was laid to rest in the Alva Cemetery beside her twin brother, Ernest R. Willson. Ella Covin Pollock was proud of her handsome Point Lace which was exhibited at the 1893 Word's Fair.2 |
Birth* | Ella Willson was born in New York, U.S.A. . |
Marriage* | She married Ezekle Colvin in 1875, in Rock Port, Atchison County, Missouri, U.S.A. . |
Marriage* | Ella Willson married Albert Pollock on 6 September 1883, in Deadwood, Lawrence County, South Dakota, U.S.A. . |
Death* | Ella Willson died on 17 April 1927, in Alva, Crook County, Wyoming, U.S.A. . |
Burial* | She was buried in Alva Cemetery, Alva, Crook County, South Dakota, U.S.A. . She was laid to rest next to her twin brother, Ernest R. |
Citations
- [S993] Crook County Historical Society, Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920 (303 East Sioux, Pierre, South Dakota: State Publishing Company, 1981). Hereinafter cited as Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920.
- [S993] Crook County Historical Society, Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920 (303 East Sioux, Pierre, South Dakota: State Publishing Company, 1981), Pages 398 & 399.. Hereinafter cited as Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920.
Frederick 'Fred' Joseph Willson1
M, #54020, b. 16 February 1890, d. June 1976
Note* | Frederick 'Fred' Joseph Willson was born February 16, 1890 at the River Ranch, Crook County, Wyoming. Attended by his grandmother Susan (Massey) Baxter and her sister Elizabeth (Massey Pannell. Died June 1977 at age 86. Married Matilda Koethe January 27, 1917 and divorced. He married Thursday Grant August 15, 1935. Fred was a rancher and blacksmith atHulett. In 1936 Fred and Thursday moved to Idaho. In Elk River, Fred logged and worked for the Highway Department. In 1948 moved to Harrison. Retired there in 1955. Requested that at his death his ashes be scattered over the mountains where he loved to camp and hunt. A headstone was placed by his parents at the Hulett Cemetery. From his first marriage, Fred had one son, Russell Irwin Willson. This account is found on page 223 in the book, 'Hulett Area Past And Present' Compiled, Published and Distributed by Hulett Area SeniorCitizens, Inc. Printed by Sand Creek Printing, Belle Fourche, SouthDakota. 1885-1985. |
Birth* | Frederick 'Fred' Joseph Willson was born on 16 February 1890 in River Ranch, Crook County, Wyoming, U.S.A. .1 |
| He was the son of Edward Douglas Willson and Mary Belle 'Belle' Baxter. |
Marriage* | Frederick 'Fred' Joseph Willson married Matilda Koethe on 27 January 1917.1 |
Death* | Frederick 'Fred' Joseph Willson died in June 1976, at age 86.1 |
Burial* | He was buried in Hulett Cemetery, Block 2, Lot 31, Hulett, Crook County, Wyoming, U.S.A. .2 |
Citations
- [S1133] Hulett Area Senior Citizens, Hulett Area Past & Present (Hulett, Wyoming, U.S.A.: Hulett Area Senior Citizens, ). Hereinafter cited as Hulett Area Past & Present.
- [S1034] More Hullett Area Past & Present, Hullet Area Senior Citizens, compiler, (Hullett, Ontario: Hullet Area Senior Citizens). Hereinafter cited as More Hullett Area Past & Present.
Harry Willson1
M, #54049, b. 1877
Citations
- [S1034] More Hullett Area Past & Present, Hullet Area Senior Citizens, compiler, (Hullett, Ontario: Hullet Area Senior Citizens). Hereinafter cited as More Hullett Area Past & Present.
- [S993] Crook County Historical Society, Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920 (303 East Sioux, Pierre, South Dakota: State Publishing Company, 1981). Hereinafter cited as Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920.
Jessie Willson1
F, #54050
Citations
- [S1034] More Hullett Area Past & Present, Hullet Area Senior Citizens, compiler, (Hullett, Ontario: Hullet Area Senior Citizens). Hereinafter cited as More Hullett Area Past & Present.
- [S993] Crook County Historical Society, Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920 (303 East Sioux, Pierre, South Dakota: State Publishing Company, 1981). Hereinafter cited as Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920.
Lewis 'Louis' Willson1
M, #54047, b. 10 July 1845
Citations
- [S1034] More Hullett Area Past & Present, Hullet Area Senior Citizens, compiler, (Hullett, Ontario: Hullet Area Senior Citizens). Hereinafter cited as More Hullett Area Past & Present.
- [S993] Crook County Historical Society, Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920 (303 East Sioux, Pierre, South Dakota: State Publishing Company, 1981). Hereinafter cited as Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920.
Lewis 'Ted' Willson1
M, #54119, b. 1914
Citations
- [S993] Crook County Historical Society, Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920 (303 East Sioux, Pierre, South Dakota: State Publishing Company, 1981). Hereinafter cited as Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920.
Nena Baxter Willson1
F, #54024, b. 8 January 1895, d. February 1968
Note* | Nena Baxter Willson was born January 8, 1895 at the Riverdale Ranch,Crook County, Wyoming. She died February 1968 at Buffalo, Wyoming at age73. She married Victor A. Suhr in 1922. Nena stayed with her aunt, NenaBaxter, and attended college at Fayetteville, Arkansas. She also went toStanford University in California. Nena taught in the grade school inBuffalo, Wyoming for many years till her retirement. She loved to beoutdoors gardening. Her flowers and garden were well known. Nena'smother, Belle, lived with her for many years. Vick had a Texaco gas andbulk station for many years. Later sold and bought a ranch betweenBuffalo and the Big Horn Mountains on Clear Creek. Nena and Vick had oneson, Richard Harris, born April 17, 1933 at Buffalo, Wyoming. Dick was aNavy pilot in the Korean War, later becoming a commercial pilot forNorthwest Airlines and now an overseas pilot. He lives in Seattle,Washington. He was married and has two daughters. When Dick was smallhe was very attached to his grandmother and called her 'Mucco.' Nenaremembered Fred playing with his dad's cavalry sabre. One day he stuckhimself in the leg with it. The sabre now belongs to her son, Dick.Also of when Earl was small, she'd often have to grab his dress to keephim from tumbling into the river. This account is found on page 224 in the book, 'Hulett Area Past AndPresent' Compiled, Published and Distributed by Hulett Area SeniorCitizens, Inc. Printed by Sand Creek Printing, Belle Fourche, SouthDakota. 1885-1985. |
Birth* | Nena Baxter Willson was born on 8 January 1895 in Riverdale Ranch, on the Belle Fourche River, Crook County, Wyoming .1 |
| She was the daughter of Edward Douglas Willson and Mary Belle 'Belle' Baxter. |
Death* | Nena Baxter Willson died in February 1968, at age 73, in Buffalo, Crook County, Wyoming, U.S.A. .1 |
Citations
- [S1133] Hulett Area Senior Citizens, Hulett Area Past & Present (Hulett, Wyoming, U.S.A.: Hulett Area Senior Citizens, ). Hereinafter cited as Hulett Area Past & Present.
Russell Willson1
M, #54045, b. circa 1800
Biographical Note* | Russel Willson was born early 1800 in the United States. Married Cordelia Catherin Schoonmacher. She was Holland Dutch and he was Welch. They lived at Jamestown, Chautauqua County, New York. To this union were born eight children: Louis, born July 10, 1845; Edward, born September11, 1847; and Walter, the youngest, May 18, 1860. Russell Willson in 1849 went from New York to California to the goldfields. There is a letter he wrote to his wife from Sacramento. He is said to have formed the New York Volunteers and joined the Union Army to fight in the Civil War. Louis, age 18, and Edward, age 16, joined the Union Army, Company C, 9th Regiment of New York Calvary on February 15, 1864 at Jamestown. They had been trying to join for two years but were turned away as too young. Later discharged July 17, 1865 in Virginia at the end of the war. They were under General Sheridan and General Sherman on the march 'from Atlanta to the Sea.' They entered the war at the Battle of the Wilderness, fighting in the thick timber caused many small fires to start. Smoke and fire made fighting more difficult. Ed told of being behind a stump for protection with another man, when this man didn’t answer, Ed looked around to see him with a bullet hole between the eyes. Decided it wasn't safe there, reached up to grasp a sapling, bullets almost cut the sapling in two, so he just settled back down. Living conditions on the march to the sea very often were very bad. Sometimes they had nothing. When night came they would wrap the reins around their hands and lay on the ground in front of their horses to sleep. They ate when they could find something. To prevent the enemy from using the railroad rails, the soldiers would pry loose the railroad rails, heat them in a fire and bend around a tree. Ed helped float log rafts, loose logs fastened together, down the Alleghenies River, Ohio and Mississippi to St. Louis. This account is found on page 222 in the book, 'Hulett Area Past And Present' Compiled, Published and Distributed by Hulett Area Senior Citizens, Inc. Printed by Sand Creek Printing, Belle Fourche, South Dakota. 1885-1985. |
Birth* | Russell Willson was born circa 1800 in U.S.A. 1 |
Marriage* | He married Cordedlia Catherin Schoonmacher. |
Citations
- [S1034] More Hullett Area Past & Present, Hullet Area Senior Citizens, compiler, (Hullett, Ontario: Hullet Area Senior Citizens). Hereinafter cited as More Hullett Area Past & Present.
Vera Willson1
F, #54115, b. 1911
Citations
- [S993] Crook County Historical Society, Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920 (303 East Sioux, Pierre, South Dakota: State Publishing Company, 1981). Hereinafter cited as Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920.
Walter Munn Willson1
M, #54027, b. 18 May 1860, d. 26 January 1931
Citations
- [S1034] More Hullett Area Past & Present, Hullet Area Senior Citizens, compiler, (Hullett, Ontario: Hullet Area Senior Citizens). Hereinafter cited as More Hullett Area Past & Present.
- [S993] Crook County Historical Society, Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920 (303 East Sioux, Pierre, South Dakota: State Publishing Company, 1981). Hereinafter cited as Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920.
Zeta Willson1
F, #54111, b. 1909
Citations
- [S993] Crook County Historical Society, Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920 (303 East Sioux, Pierre, South Dakota: State Publishing Company, 1981). Hereinafter cited as Pioneers of Crook County 1876-1920.
John M. Wilmot1
M, #102237
Stephen Wilmot of Saint John, New Brunswick1
M, #102238
Child of Stephen Wilmot of Saint John, New Brunswick
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|
Catherine Wilneff
F, #21603
Mary Wilocot1
F, #73093
Citations
- [S362] Harold Cairns, Electronic Family File, Stanley Bridge, Prince Edward Island.
Adelaide Idella Wilson
F, #22386
Agnes Wilson1 
F, #8804, b. 1784, d. 15 October 1842
Birth* | Agnes Wilson was born in 1784 in Dumfries, Dumfriesshire, Scotland .1 |
| She was the daughter of James Wilson.2 |
Marriage* | Agnes Wilson married Thomas Cairns on 15 July 1804, in Dumfries, Dumfriesshire, Scotland .2,3 |
(Witness) Emigration | Agnes Wilson emigrated with Thomas Cairns in 1833 in Dumfriesshire, Scotland ; in the 1901 Canada Census the immigration year was recorded as 1845, while the 1911 Canada Census recorded the immigration year was recorded as 1831. The entry in the 1901 census is obviously in error as his daughter Elizabeth married Robert Walker in 1834 in Prince Edward Island.4,5 |
Death* | Agnes Wilson died on 15 October 1842, in Bedeque, Prince County, Prince Edward Island ; Obituary: "Bedeque, 15th, Agnes, wife of Thomas Cairns, age 61. Native of Dumfries." (Royal Gazette, 26 October 1841.)3,6 |
Burial* | She was buried in North Bedeque Cemetery, North Bedeque, Prince County, Prince Edward Island, 46.36185,-63.72576 . Inscription: THOMAS CAIRNS / DIED / Jan. 3, 1863 / Aged 80 Y's / His Wife / AGNES / DIED / Oct. 1842. / Aged 58 Y's / Natives of Dumfriesshire, / SCOTLAND // A.W. Andres, Pt. du Chene. (stonecutter).3 Tombstone, Thomas Cairns (1783-1863), his wife Agnes Wilson (1784-1842). North Bedeque Cemetery, North Bedeque, Prince County, Prince Edward Island.  Front inscription detail. |
Citations
- [S362] Harold Cairns, Electronic Family File, Stanley Bridge, Prince Edward Island.
- [S8101] Thomas Cairns & Agnes Wilson, (15 July 1804), Scotland, Marriages, 1561-1910, LDS Batch Number: M11821-7, System Origin: Scotland-ODM, GS Film: 1067960 "Scotland, Marriages, 1561-1910," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/XTLB-J3B : accessed 03 Mar 2013), Thomas Cairns and Agnes Wilson, 15 Jul 1804. Hereinafter cited as Marriage Record.
- [S2826] Marker Inscription - Thomas Cairns. Thomas Cairns, Marker Inscription; David A. Walker, August 2006.
- [S2970] From Scotland to Prince Edward Island, Peter Gallant, compiler, (Charlottetown, P.E.I.: P.E.I. Genealogical Society, January 2001), pg. 4, which was taken from his death record.. Hereinafter cited as From Scotland to Prince Edward Island.
- [S5019] 1911 Canada Census - Mary (Cairns) Price, Mary (Cairns) Price, Head Household #14, 1911, Microfilm, Page 14. District #140, Summerside, Sub-district 46, Prince County, Prince Edward Island. National Archives of Canada, 395 Wellington St., Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
- [S2970] From Scotland to Prince Edward Island, Peter Gallant, compiler, (Charlottetown, P.E.I.: P.E.I. Genealogical Society, January 2001), Obituary in Royal Gazette, 26 October 1841.. Hereinafter cited as From Scotland to Prince Edward Island.
- [S8103] Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950, transcription, baptism, LDS Batch Number: C19524-1, System Origin: Scotland-VR, GS Film: 1067959, Reference ID: 2:1698JTD, "Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/XT15-G2K : accessed 03 Mar 2013), (31 December 1806). Hereinafter cited as Scotland Births and Baptisms.
- [S8105] Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950, transcription, baptism, LDS Batch Number: C19524-1, System Origin: Scotland-VR, GS Film: 1067959, Reference ID: 2:1699OOL, "Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/XT15-G2K : accessed 03 Mar 2013), (12 July 1809). Hereinafter cited as Scotland, Births and Baptisms.
- [S8102] Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950, transcription, baptism, LDS Batch Number: C19524-1, System Origin: Scotland-VR, GS Film: 1067959, Reference ID: 2:1699FFJ, "Scotland, Births and Baptisms, 1564-1950," index, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/XT15-JS4 : accessed 03 Mar 2013), (6 May 1812). Hereinafter cited as Scotland Births and Baptisms.
- [S6906] Robert Glover & Agnes Cairns, (13 October 1841), Prince Edward Island Marriage Registers, 1832-1888 (1839-1844), Page 265 Image 133. Hereinafter cited as Prince Edward Island Marriage Registers.
- [S2287] Parish Register, Dumfries, 373-14505, (1817), ABBR Parish: NB, Point de Bute. Hereinafter cited as Parish Register, Dumfries.
Albert Wilson1
M, #50132
Citations
- [S1080] Grace W. (Scott) Streeter, "Grace W. (Scott) Streeter, compiled records" (Jackson Highway, Chehalis, Washington). . Hereinafter cited as "Grace W. (Scott) Streeter, compiled records."
Alice Wilson1
F, #79849
Note* | By Thomas Spencer, Justice. |
Marriage* | Alice Wilson married Robert Fish on 6 April 1727.1 |
Citations
- [S1396] Lester Warren Fish, The Fish Family in England and America (Rutland, Vermont.: Tuttle Publishing Co., 1948), 85-86. Hereinafter cited as The Fish Family.
Arnold E. Wilson1
M, #108587, b. 1906, d. 2006
Citations
- [S12380] Cemetery marker, Peoples Cemetery, Summerside, Prince County, Prince Edward Island, Canada. Cyrus B. Morris family plot, tombstone inscription & photograph; read by David A. Walker, 28 July 2017.
- [S8553] Cemetery Transcript, Peoples Cemetery, Summerside, Prince County, Prince Edward Island, PEIGS publication Lot 17-4 (2003), Library of David Arthur Walker, , marker for Cyrus Bradford Morris & Florence I. Mills.
Art Wilson1
M, #87326
Citations
- [S2043] Cory Family Society. This site contains genealogies of several early Corey/Cory families., online http://www.coryfamsoc.com. Hereinafter cited as Cory Family Society.
Bamford Erasmus Wilson1
M, #105975
Citations
- [S10360] Late Registration of Birth, Province of New Brunswick, Canada, Emma Ola Wilson, digital image of original page PANB microfilm F19720, Code 1904-802692 (filed 29 September 1937), Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, Fredericton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada.
- [S10359] Official Notice of Marriage, Province of New Brunswick, Canada, Presley Edward Brydges & Emma Ola Wilson marriage, 5 November 1938, Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, Fredericton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada. PANB microfilm F20011, Code B4/1938, Number 13345.
Benjamin Mairs Wilson1,2
M, #76648, b. 5 November 1848
Note* | Son of Dr. John & Sarah Ann (Mairs) Wilson. He is a lawyer, a member of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and was forsome time American Vice Consul at Antwerp, Belgium. He received thedegree of Doctor Juris in 1871 from the University of Heidelberg. He wasa member of the Illinois State Legislature, has resided in Pittsburg,Pa., Washington, D. C., Brussels, Belgium, Chicago, Ill., Nashville, N.C., and Paris, and now resides in Versailles, France. |
Birth* | Benjamin Mairs Wilson was born on 5 November 1848 in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania . |
Marriage* | He married Frances Huntington, daughter of Alonzo Huntington and Patience Lorain Dyer, in November 1874.3 |
Marriage* | Benjamin Mairs Wilson married Edith St. George Huntington, daughter of Henry Alonzo Huntington and Frances S. Tucker, on 5 November 1908.4 |
Citations
- [S1397] Alonzo Howard Clark Louis Henry Cornish, A National Register of the Society , Sons of the American Revolution ( Press of A. H. Kellogg, 1902). Hereinafter cited as A National Register of the Society.
- [S1500] Elijah Balwin Huntington, A Genealogical Memoir of the Huntington Family in This Country (Stamford, Connecticut, U.S.A.: published by the author, 1863), 217, 218. Hereinafter cited as Huntington Genealogical Memoir.
- [S1500] Elijah Balwin Huntington, A Genealogical Memoir of the Huntington Family in This Country (Stamford, Connecticut, U.S.A.: published by the author, 1863), 218. Hereinafter cited as Huntington Genealogical Memoir.
- [S1500] Elijah Balwin Huntington, A Genealogical Memoir of the Huntington Family in This Country (Stamford, Connecticut, U.S.A.: published by the author, 1863), 217. Hereinafter cited as Huntington Genealogical Memoir.
Berenice Wilson
F, #14456
Cecil Mcadfren Wilson
M, #16786, b. 11 May 1908
Child Wilson
?, #13108, b. January 1879, d. January 1879
Cynthia Jane Wilson
F, #14780, b. 20 July 1869, d. 25 March 1958
Birth* | Cynthia Jane Wilson was born on 20 July 1869 in Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S.A. . |
| She was the daughter of James Wilson and Cornelia Jane Follett. |
Marriage* | Cynthia Jane Wilson married Robert Burns Maxfield, son of Richard Dunwell Maxfield and Artemissa Ann Harris, on 29 August 1892, in Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S.A. . |
Divorce* | Cynthia Jane Wilson and Robert Burns Maxfield later divorced after 26 April 1911. |
Death* | Cynthia Jane Wilson died on 25 March 1958, at age 88, in Los Angeles County, California, U.S.A. . |
Eliza Wilson1
F, #48008
Child of Eliza Wilson and Ramsey
|
|
Citations
- [S936] Jean Agnes (Ferguson) Smith, "Compiled Records of Jean Agnes (Ferguson) Smith, author of 'Ennis History'" (10215 150 St. Apt. 226, Surrey, B.C., Canada). . Hereinafter cited as "Compiled Records of Jean Agnes (Ferguson) Smith, author of 'Ennis History.'"
Elizabeth Wilson
F, #10933, b. 1708
Citations
- [S362] Harold Cairns, Electronic Family File, Stanley Bridge, Prince Edward Island.
Ellsworth Wilson1
M, #108728
Citations
- [S12579] Drowning Tragedy Claims Life of Crapaud Child, Journal, Summerside, Prince County, Prince Edward Island, Canada. Hereinafter cited as Journal.
Emma Ola Wilson1
F, #105974, b. 10 January 1904, d. 2 January 1986
Name-Com | Emma Ola Wilson is commonly known as Ola Wilson.1 |
Birth* | She was born on 10 January 1904 in Moncton, Westmorland County, New Brunswick, Canada ; the informant for this Late Registration of Birth was Emma's mother, dated 22 September 1937 at Moncton.2,1 |
| She was the daughter of Bamford Erasmus Wilson and Hannah Selena Lutz.2,1 |
Marriage* | Emma Ola Wilson married Presley Edward Brydges, son of Alexander Brydges and Angelina Wallace, on 5 November 1938, in St. George's Anglican Church, Moncton, Westmorland County, New Brunswick, Canada . They were married by license. Presley was 35 years old, an assistant department manager at T. Eaton Co., living in Moncton, a bachelor, Anglican. Ola was 34 years old, living at home, a spinster, Baptist.1 |
Death* | Emma Ola Wilson died on 2 January 1986, at age 81.3 |
Burial* | She was buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Moncton, Westmorland County, New Brunswick, Canada, 46.11105,-64.77580 . Inscription: BRYDGES / 1903 Presley E. Brydges 1986/ His Wife / 1904 Ola Wilson 1998.4
 Tombstone, Presley E. Brydges (1903-1986), his wife Ola Wilson (1904-1998). Elmwood Cemetery, Moncton, Westmorland County, New Brunswick, Canada. |
Citations
- [S10359] Official Notice of Marriage, Province of New Brunswick, Canada, Presley Edward Brydges & Emma Ola Wilson marriage, 5 November 1938, Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, Fredericton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada. PANB microfilm F20011, Code B4/1938, Number 13345.
- [S10360] Late Registration of Birth, Province of New Brunswick, Canada, Emma Ola Wilson, digital image of original page PANB microfilm F19720, Code 1904-802692 (filed 29 September 1937), Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, Fredericton, York County, New Brunswick, Canada.
- [S50] Elmwood Cemetery Office Records (Moncton, New Brunswick: Office Records, 2000). Hereinafter cited as Elmwood Cemetery Office Records.
- [S13282] Cemetery marker, Elmwood Cemetery, Moncton, Westmorland County, New Brunswick, Canada. Presley Brydges & Ola Wilson, tombstone inscription & photograph; documented by David A. Walker, 14 May 2018.
Ethel Pearl Wilson
F, #22496, b. 10 April 1921, d. 18 February 1944
Ethel Sarah Wilson1
F, #59098, b. 11 September 1884, d. 16 November 1964
Note* | They raised a family of five children. Ethel worked as a seamstress anddressmaker until her marriage. |
Birth* | Ethel Sarah Wilson was born on 11 September 1884 in Stratford, Perth County, Ontario, Canada .1 |
Marriage* | She married Frederick Athol Ennis, son of Richard Thomas Ennis and Francis 'Fanny' Jane Taylor, on 7 July 1908, in Niagara Falls, Niagara Falls County, Ontario, Canada .1 |
Death* | Ethel Sarah Wilson died on 16 November 1964, at age 80, in Brussels, Huron County, Ontario, Canada .1 |
Citations
- [S1213] Jean Agnes (Ferguson) Smith, Ennis History, Part 2 (: privately published, 1979). Hereinafter cited as Ennis History, Part 2.
Francis Wilson
M, #10565, b. 5 November 1676
Fred Wilson1
M, #84492, b. circa 1900
Citations
- [S2043] Cory Family Society. This site contains genealogies of several early Corey/Cory families., online http://www.coryfamsoc.com. Hereinafter cited as Cory Family Society.
George Eugene Wilson Jr.1
M, #107389, b. 31 August 1922, d. 3 April 1992
Name-Com | George Eugene Wilson Jr. is commonly known as George Wilson.2 |
Birth* | He was born on 31 August 1922 in Yuma, Yuma County, Arizona, U.S.A. .1 |
| He was the son of George Eugene Wilson Sr. and Anna Aune.1 |
(Son) Census HeadHousehold | George Wilson was enumerated on the census of 2 April 1940 in the household of James Walker, as a son, in Yuma, Yuma County, Arizona, U.S.A. . Enumerated in the household with James (age 71) were his second wife Anna (age 42), her children by her first marriage, Susan (age 19) and George (age 17). James was a stationary machinist, Susan a saleslady in a variety store, George a newspaper carrier. James declared that he was born in Maine, which is incorrect as he was actually born in Prince Edward Island, as were his parents.2 |
Death* | George Eugene Wilson Jr. died on 3 April 1992, at age 69.3 |
Citations
- [S11457] Arizona Birth Records, 1880-1935, Jr. George Eugene Wilson entry, digital copy of original document compiled by the Arizona Department of Health Services, 765-831-115, Ancestry (USA), http://www.ancestry.com
- [S11460] 1940 U.S. Census, Yuma, Yuma County, Arizona, household #10 of James Walker, 2 April 1940, digital copy of original census document, NARA Roll T627_115, Page 61A, Enumeration district 14-5. National Archives and Records Administration, Washington, D.C., U.S.A..
- [S11458] U.S. Social Security Applications and Claims Index, 1936-2007, Jr. George Eugene Wilson entry. Ancestry (USA), http://www.ancestry.com. Hereinafter cited as U.S. Social Security Applications and Claims Index, 1936-2007.