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M John Warren

Avioliitot ja lapset

Lisätietoja

Merkintöjä henkilöstä

Register of St. Paul'S Church, Waterloo, Township of Bertie, 1836, from Bill Martin's site, originally published by the Ontario Historical Society:
1836 March 20th John Borlase Warren of the Township of Bertie, Bachelor, and Mary Margaret Clarke Kerby of the same place, Spinster, were married, by license on the twentieth day of March in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and thirty six, by me John Anderson Rector of Waterloo.
In the presence of Wm Smith and Wm Anderson C .
[John Borlase Warren was a son of Lieut. Colonel John Warren, member of the Legislative Assembly for Haldimand who died in 1832. Miss Mary Margaret Clarke Kerby was the eldest daughter of Colonel James Kerby, born in 1814 and named after Mrs Thomas Clarke, who was a daughter of Dr Robert Kerr and a granddaughter of Sir William Johnson.]

Introduction to the Register of Saint Paul's Church at Fort Erie, 1836-1844, by Brig.-General E. A. Cruikshank, LL.D., F.R. Hist. S., from Bill Martin's site, originally published by the Ontario Historical Society.
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On the conclusion of peace the ferry below the Fort Erie rapids to the village of Black Rock on the opposite bank of the river had been reestablished and several stores, taverns, and other buildings were erected near the ferry-wharf and the mills at the rapids, forming a small straggling village, which became a place of considerable trade and about 1816 received the name of Waterloo. The most notable resident then was Lieut. Colonel John Warren, who besides being commandant of the local regiment of militia, was a Justice of the Peace, a Judge of the Court of Requests for the trial of small civil causes, and had succeeded his father as collector of customs and lessee of the ferry. Tradition relates that, as a magistrate, he had officiated at many marriages, of which the record has been lost. In consideration of his public services he had received the maximum grant of crown lands and had obtained a licence of occupation of the glebe of four hundred acres in the township of Bertie. Other persons of consequence were Benjamin Hardison, a magistrate and owner of a considerable tract of land, who had been a member of the assembly, William Stanton, deputy assistant commissary general, and Alexander Douglas, a prosperous merchant.

Introduction to the Register of Saint Paul's Church at Fort Erie, 1836-1844, by Brig.-General E. A. Cruikshank, LL.D., F.R. Hist. S., from Bill Martin's site, originally published by the Ontario Historical Society.
...
On the conclusion of peace the ferry below the Fort Erie rapids to the village of Black Rock on the opposite bank of the river had been reestablished and several stores, taverns, and other buildings were erected near the ferry-wharf and the mills at the rapids, forming a small straggling village, which became a place of considerable trade and about 1816 received the name of Waterloo. The most notable resident then was Lieut. Colonel John Warren, who besides being commandant of the local regiment of militia, was a Justice of the Peace, a Judge of the Court of Requests for the trial of small civil causes, and had succeeded his father as collector of customs and lessee of the ferry. Tradition relates that, as a magistrate, he had officiated at many marriages, of which the record has been lost. In consideration of his public services he had received the maximum grant of crown lands and had obtained a licence of occupation of the glebe of four hundred acres in the township of Bertie. Other persons of consequence were Benjamin Hardison, a magistrate and owner of a considerable tract of land, who had been a member of the assembly, William Stanton, deputy assistant commissary general, and Alexander Douglas, a prosperous merchant.
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John Warren, the elder, William Stanton, and Benjamin Hardison all had large families, who intermarried and formed a sort of local aristocracy. Kerby's eldest daughter married a Warren and her sister married a Hardison. ...