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Ward
White
| Henkilön puolelta John White 1837- |
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Married Etta Schantz and had one child, Dorothy (who married Ernest Russell) and then married again.
History of the Wigle Family and Their Descendants, The Wigle Family, Kingsville, Ontario, 1931.
Commemorative Biographical Record of the County of Essex, J. H. Beers & Co., Toronto, 1905, p. 547-548:
James White, formerly a well known farmer of Mersea township, now living retired, is one of the oldest citizens of that township, where he was born and has passed his entire life. He was a pioneer among pioneers, and is a worthy descendant of his sturdy Scotch forebears, being noted for his unswerving honesty and uprightness of character.
James White, father of James, was the first of the family to leave Scotland, coming to Canada when a young man and locating in Mersea township. He obtained Lot no. 236, of the Talbot Grant, on what is now Talbot Street, a tract of 200 acres, on which he erected a log house and began his pioneer life. By unremitting industry and hard labor he cleared a portion of the homestead, and passed the rest of his life there, engaged in farming. He died in 1853, at the age of sixty-five, and was buried in the family lot on the farm, an old willow tree marking his last resting place. He and his wife were members of St. John's English Church, of which he was one of the founders. He married, in Mersea township, Phoebe Walton, who died when nearly eighty-seven years of age, and is buried beside her husband. She was a devoted wife and mother, a true Christian woman, and shared uncomplainingly all the hardships and privations of pioneer life. The children of this union were as follows: Betsey (deceased), who married John Robinson; Mary (deceased), who married Thomas Hodgson; Jane (deceased), who married Russell Fox, of Mersea township; Nancy (deceased), who married Absalom Jones; Phoebe, who married Major Thomas M. Fox, of Wheatley; James, who is mentioned below; John, also mentioned below, who lives on the home farm; and George, a retired farmer, who lives in Leamington.
James White was born in the old log house at the homestead, on Talbot Street South, Sept. 1, 1833... He married Jan. 8, 1855, Mary Alice Setterington, who was born in Mersea township, daughter of John Setterington... To Mr. and Mrs. White ten children were born...
John White, brother of James, was born on the homestead Sept. 12, 1837, and like his brother attended school in the log schoolhouse. He was only sixteen when his father died, and remained on the home farm until the property was divided, and he received the seventy-five acres in the southwestern part of the original tract. There he has lived ever since, engaged in tobacco growing and in general farming. He has erected a fine brick dwelling house, and made other extensive improvements, and is prosperous and successful in his chosen occupation. Like his brother he is widely known and respected for his business capacity and his honorable dealings with all men, and is one of the highly respected citizens of his locality. He is a man of domestic tastes and temperate habits. In politics he is a Conservative. He is a member of Wesley Church, which he helped to organize, and which owes much to his interest in its work and welfare. He has served as steward and trustee of the church, has been a teacher in the Sunday School, and acted as assistant superintendent. He is a member of the Agricultural Society, and belongs to the Ancient Order of United Workmen. He married (first) in 1861, Susan Malott, daughter of Joseph Malott, and they had the following children: Emily, who married Wellington Franklin, of Romney township, Kent County; Frederick, who is a farmer in Mersea township, Concession 5; Culbert, who is also a farmer in Mersea township; Ward, who is a ranchman in North-West Territory; and Susan, who died young. Mrs. Susan (Malott) White, who was a member of the Methodist Church, died in 1873, and is buried in Lake View Cemetery. Mr. White subsequently married (second) Harriet Malott, daughter of Jonas Malott, and they reside on the homestead. They have one son, Edmund James, who married Ethel Campbell, and lives at home with his parents. All the family are highly respected for their many excellent qualities, and they have a wide circle of friends.
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