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K Margaret (Peggy) Brown

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Commemorative Biographical Record of the County of Essex, J. H. Beers & Co., Toronto, 1905, p. 90-92:
Simeon M. Stewart is a representative member of one of the historic families of County Essex, and is now proprietor of the leading hotel at Ruthven. The family, as the name indicates, is of Scottish extraction.
     James Stewart, progenitor of the family in County Essex, was born in Argyllshire, Scotland... During the American Revolution he served as a colonel in the British army, and took part in the battle of Bunker Hill... he subsequently married, in Maryland, a Scottish-born maiden, Margaret Brown, and started with her across the Alleghany Mountains, she being the second white woman who had ever crossed voluntarily. They settled on a farm in Dunkard township, Greene county, Pennsylvania, and in the course of time eight children were born to them, four sons - James, John, Daniel and Charles - and four daughters - Sophia, Mary, Jane and one whose name is not recorded.
     [Story of James Stewart's death at the hands of the Indians, and James and John being captured and taken to Malden. John escaped, and later James acquired a farm near Cedar Creek.] In 1805, the mother, then seventy-four years old, accompained by her sons and their families, came to Canada, where she died in 1838, at the advanced age of 107 years.
     John and Charles Stewart served under Gen. Anthony Wayne in the Indian war in Ohio, and also assisted in the building of the stronghold, Fort Erie, the first one on Lake Erie. John Stewart married in Canada a Miss Augustine and Charles married Jennie Findlay.
     Charles Stewart, the grandfather of our subject, was born in Pennsylvania, and when he settled in Ontario drew a Government lot on the 4th Concession, in Mersea township. Later he acquired much land, enough to enable him to start each of his sons with a farm. For years he was an elder in the Baptist Church. His children were: Charles, who lives at Olinda (he married Mary Whittle, whose youngest daughter married J. S. Bruner); John, who lived at Olinda and married Eliza Hamilton; Abel; and James. Of the daughters, Margaret married Michael Fox, locally known as "Big Mike"; Tabitha married Rev. Mr. Irving, a Baptist preacher; Polly married Lorenzo Dow Vaughtan; and Sally married Harrison Brown.
     Abel Stewart was born June 22, 1815, on the homestead farm in Mersea township, where he grew to manhood. He began farming on 100 acres of the homestead farm, selling that later and coming to Lot 12, on the Lake Shore in Gosfield, where he purchased 100 acres of unimproved land. On the front of this lot he built a water mill, which he ran for many years, and then sold to a Mr. Patton. He completed the clearing of his land, and built a frame house which still stands on the place, his first home having been a log cabin. His death took place Sept. 21, 1884, when he was aged sixty-nine years, two months, twenty-nine days. He married Lucy Blackman, who was born at Lockport, New York, and who died in Gosfield Feb. 24, 1893, aged sixty-six years, nine months, twenty-four days. Their children were: Rilla, widow of Leonard Fox, has two children, George and Amelia; Tabitha is the wife of William J. Fox; Demarius is the widow of John Fox, of Windsor; Horatio, a farmer of Pelee Island, married Katie Shoetie; Michael, a stonemason in Detroit, married Delia Burke, and they have two children, Amelia and Rexford; Simeon M. is mentioned below; Elihu B., of Detroit, married Jane Hairsine, and they have three children, Leonard, Maitland and Eva, both sons being physicians; Nathaniel, of Leamington, married a Miss Fink; Duncan resides at Cohoes, New York; William lives at Ruthven; Wilday married Cornelius Neilson, of Sandusky, Ohio, and they have a daughter, Ethel.
     Simeon M. Stewart was born Nov. 13, 1850, on the old homestead in Mersea township, and was a boy when the family removed to the Lake Shore in Gosfield. He obtained his education in the section school. His first independent venture was as a hog and cattle buyer for Bellnap & Drake, of Detroit, and he also did some buying for Hiram Walker. For nine months he worked at the carpenter trade in Lasalle county, Illinois.
     On March 1, 1877, Mr. Stewart rented the "Lovelace Hotel" at Ruthven, which he conducted for five years, and then moved to Leamington. After one year there in the livery business he bought the "Lake View Hotel", which he operated for a time, and then sold it to become proprietor of the "Ontario House", and later the "Erie Hotel", at Wheatley. For a short time he engaged in the livery business at Leamington, but after an absence of five years returned to Ruthven. In May 1887, he purchased the hotel which he has since ably conducted, under the name of the "Stewart House". In addition he owns the home farm, and looks after this property in connection with his other business.
     In politics Mr. Stewart is a Conservative and he has always taken a lively interest in local affairs, but has never consented to hold political office, although eminently qualified to do so. For the past seventeen years he has been fraternally connected with the Order of United Workmen at Kingsville.
     On Feb. 14, 1877, Mr. Stewart was married to Minnie, daughter of John Nutson, and three sons have been born to them, namely: Alfred, born May 17, 1879, is a graduate of the Medical Department of the Toronto University; George, born July 1, 1881, is a student in the Medical Department of the Toronto University; Joseph, born June 4, 1884, completed the course at the Leamington high school in 1904, and is now taking up dentistry in Toronto University.

Commemorative Biographical Record of the County of Essex, J. H. Beers & Co., Toronto, 1905, p. 156-157:
John S. Bruner, one of the leading citizens of Gosfield South, an extensive farmer and fruit grower at Elm Bluff Fruit Farm, occupies the old home of his father and grandfather, belonging as he does to one of the oldest and most honorable families of this part of County Essex...
      John S. Bruner was born April 5, 1852... In 1872 Mr. Bruner was married to Catherine E., youngest daughter of Charles Stewart, Sr...
      Mrs. Catherine E. (Stewart) Bruner was born in the township of Mersea, Feb. 26, 1856, daughter of Charles (Jr.) and Mary (Whittle) Stewart, natives of Pennsylvania and the County of Essex, respectively, granddaughter of Charles Stewart (Sr.) and great-granddaughter of James Stewart.
      James Stewart, father of Charles Stewart, Sr., was born in Scotland and came to America about 1775. He came out as a soldier, belonging to the regiment known as the Black Watch, the 42nd Highlanders. He was married in Virginia to Peggy Brown, a Scotchwoman, and they afterward moved to Greene County, Pennsylvania, where they raised a family, Charles Stewart, Sr., being their youngest child.
      Charles Steward, Sr., was married in Pennsylvania to Jane Findley, and they afterward moved to Essex County, Ont., settling in Mersea township. They raised a large family of whom Charles Stewart, Jr., was the second one.
      Charles Stewart, Jr., married Mary Whittle, a native of Essex County, who died Aug. 9, 1885, aged seventy-five. Charles Stewart, Jr., died at the home of Mrs. Bruner, Sept. 9, 1893, aged ninety-three. They were members of the Baptist Church. To this union came the following children: Jane, deceased wife of John Hetherington; Elizabeth, deceased wife of Alexander Quick; Margaret, deceased wife of William Long; Clarissa, deceased wife of Wells Morley; Charles, deceased, who married Victoria Wilkerson; Mary, deceased wife of Jesse Brown; Malinda, wife of George Jeffery, of Mersea township; Tabitha, who died aged eleven years; Olive, deceased, who married James McQueen; Eliza Ann, widow of John Thompson, of Mersea township; Thomas, a farmer of Mersea township, who married Martha Jeffery; James who died when three years old; and Catherine E., Mrs. Bruner.